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Video Gambling Approaching Chicago

            It’s not news that there is a budget crunch in Illinois. An idea that has been floating around the General Assembly involves putting Government-owned video poker machines in various bars and dining establishments. This idea seems to have found its way into Chicago’s City Hall.

            The logic behind this idea certainly does scream “Chicago Democrat,” doesn’t it? There’s a financial crisis on, so let’s give people a brand new way to toss away their savings. Good plan.

            So what does this mean for you? Think about walking into one of your favorite eateries some time and being encountered with a box in the corner, not unlike a Pac-Man machine. Except this machine is targeted toward adults, and one such adult is hanging off the front of the machine, mesmerized and hooked. It’s a video poker machine, and, given what gambling does to many people, it should not be in the picture. Right now, targets are specifically bars, but restaurants and diners are not by any means off the table.

            Now, to be fair, like the Lottery, video gambling machines probably would drum up a few extra quarters for the city or state governments. However, the likely slight revenue increase does not justify playing on people’s vices—or, perhaps creating a new vice for those uninitiated Chicagoans—as a means to suck the change from their pockets.

            Don’t misunderstand me; legalizing gambling is not necessarily a bad move, but the idea of using it as a means to generate revenue does not have the ring of sound fiscal policy. The idea is comparable to California’s proposal to legalize marijuana for the specific purpose of collecting the sales tax revenue it would generate. We, as a society, need to be discouraging these vices, not using them to put money into government. Here’s a radical thought: if City Hall and the General Assembly are finding themselves strapped for cash, why don’t they stop spending our money?

            Freedom means choice. If someone wants to gamble, that is his or her decision, and I have no complaint there. I do have an issue with governments endorsing vices specifically to effectively tax them. Cook County Government is not a casino. The house always wins, and when the government is the house, the people lose.

Right now, the Illinois Video Gaming Act allows individual townships and counties to create and enforce their own bans on video gambling. Cook County recently passed such a ban.

            In a public statement released shortly after the county vote, Tony Peraica, Commissioner for the 16th District of Cook County, said that the ordinance banning video gambling “ensures that we will not repeat the mistake that other communities have made in their mad quest for easy money.”

            Remember that video gaming exists to tempt the user and entice him to continue wasting his money when he knows that he should stop.

            Is it really so unreasonable to ask people to do their gambling on adult cruises? Why do we need to bring video gambling into our own backyard? Quite frankly, if Chicagoans are running out of excuses not to get things done, I can make some recommendations of time-fillers that cost less and are infinitely less addictive—such as chess, MASH reruns, or reading a good book. We do not need gambling to come to Cook County.

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When in the Course of Human Events...

Out of humor comes some of the most serious of ideas.

An excellent example of this is Craig T. Nelson’s appearance on the Glenn Beck program here:

Obviously, it’s nothing new that the Government steals our money to dump countless useless programs onto us. Programs that we have no interest in or need for. But stopping to think about this, we have to ask: is there anything we can do about it?

This issue goes much deeper than merely electing the wasteful spenders and anti-capitalists that feed on our votes and tax dollars to simultaneously line their own wallets and fund the wonderful programs that countless Americans have come to depend onsuch as swine odor research. The issue is the fact that our Government somehow has the right to steal from citizens and use the money in whatever ludicrous manner it sees fit. The issue is the 16th Amendment.

For those readers who were unaware, the Federal Government was actually not permitted to even levy income taxes until 1913. Astounding, isn’t it? Our Nation survived for 137 years without a single tax dollar. Shouldn’t that make us think? Shouldn’t that remind us that most of the “services” that the Federal Government provides are completely superfluous? Think about it: all that the Fed really needs to do is keep the money circulating and maintain the military. That is revenue that can come through other means; including banks, tariffs on foreign countries, or even State funds. There is very little need for the punishment of taxation to ever fall to the individual.

I bring up the expendability of the 16th Amendment, not because I think there is a snowball’s chance in Hell that it will be repealed in my lifetime, but rather because I want our legislators to start thinking much more carefully about how to apply the Amendment’s power.

A tax of any size is a punishment. Denying this is idiotic. You want services from the Government, and they take from you to pay for said services. That is the way it works. However, what we must remember is that all possible functions of government are those functions that the people yield to the government. We could, theoretically, privately protect and defend ourselves without Government help, but we allow the Government to protect us through police and a military so that we don’t all have to be on-call militiamen. We could all provide for ourselves, but some people demand government assistance, so we have welfare programs. We could all simply divide our paychecks intelligently and save a percentage for our own retirement, but we have the government do it for us in the form of Social Security.

The point is this: we yielded power to the Government. We should be aware of our ever-present option to take it back. And we should all be willing to do so if the Government continues to buy out failing companies and failing States against our will. What we are seeing is a Government that is not, at this time, serving our best interests. We are seeing Government inflate to unprecedented sizes because we are failing to stop it. We are seeing Government steal our money and use it in ways that we disapprove of. This is dictatorship. It is only communism in which people cannot lay claim to their own propertyremember, your money is your property.

Start thinking, America. Start thinking about taking your property back.

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