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Lottery miracles only breed more gambling misery
The Boston Herald ^ | 12/21/2002 | Joe Fitzgerald

Posted on 12/21/2002 7:34:45 AM PST by GeneD

If you saw Wednesday's Herald, you, too, probably got a warm feeling looking at the picture of Richard and Betty Harrington, the ``miracle couple'' from Wakefield whose worries over staggering medical bills vanished when he realized he'd won $4 million with a scratch ticket.

Who could help but rejoice for this woman who survived a double-lung transplant and her husband whose health insurance was canceled?

Read on.

``I'll admit I was torn,'' Ruth said. ``Obviously I was happy for them because they deserved a break. But what drove me crazy was wondering how many other people who never bought a ticket will now take up the habit, hoping they'll get lucky, too.

``No one was any happier about that story than the folks who run the Lottery, especially coming just before Christmas when everyone needs a little extra cash. Sales will probably quadruple, but so will the heartaches they'll cause.''

Ruth, now 70, has shared her story here before but asks for anonymity out of respect to family members.

Her father, ``whom I dearly loved,'' had a steady job with Hood Milk when the Depression began but lost it to an addiction that would eventually claim his marriage, too.

``He loved to gamble,'' she recalls. ``He would gamble on anything; it made no difference. Put two cockroaches on the floor, and he'd want to bet you which one would reach the wall first. He would take the money customers gave him, receipts he was supposed to bring back to the plant, and gamble it all away. For a long time they just took it out of his pay, but finally the company got fed up and fired him.

``Now we were on welfare, and how my mother suffered as we moved from flat to flat because of evictions. I remember going from Greenly Place to Sylvia Street in Jamaica Plain, then to Newark Street in Roxbury, and back to JP on Call Street. I can still hear my father saying what he planned to do for us `when my ship comes in.' My mother would call out the window to him as he left, crying, telling him how much we needed that welfare check, and he'd holler, `Don't worry, I'm going to double it for you.'

``Those are memories you never forget. So when I see stories about how wonderful the Lottery is, it sickens me. It may be wonderful for a lucky few, like the ones you had on Page 1, but it's such a disaster for many families that I hate seeing it portrayed as harmless fun.''

That same day's paper also carried a front-page story predicting casino gambling would be a boon to the commonwealth, declaring, ``The potential windfall from casinos would outweigh likely social costs.''

Really? Try telling that to those whose lives have been devastated. One Boston attorney, who grew up on Mission Hill, comes to mind; you've read her story here before, too.

``Four of us were raised by my mother and supported by public assistance. She had such an addiction to gambling that most nights our dinner was one can of tomato soup mixed with three cans of water. To have a piece of bread was like having dessert. Shoes and sneakers were replaced only when the nuns complained. New clothing never came; we shopped at Morgan Memorial near Kenmore Square. Breakfast was a rarity, but lunch was a must, thanks again to the nuns.

``We had a bad enough time dealing with her going to bingo every night, playing the Spanish and Irish street numbers and keno at the local post. So you can imagine the impact on our household when the Lottery was born; now she could waste away more of the little we had with the greatest of ease, thanks to the state.''

And therein lies a question no one's eager to address: Is it appropriate for the commonwealth to have a rooting interest in the misery of its citizens?

Oh, it's easy enough to rationalize; the cash flow is obvious. But rationalizing simply means finding a good reason for doing something we know is wrong.

``My mother never drank, smoked or did drugs,'' the attorney points out. ``But I can tell you about addicted gamblers and hungry kids.''

Do you think stories like that concern proponents of casino gambling?

Pardon the expression, but don't bet on it.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; US: Massachusetts
KEYWORDS: bettyharrington; casinogambling; controlyourself; gambling; lotteries; richardharrington
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1 posted on 12/21/2002 7:34:45 AM PST by GeneD
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To: GeneD
If there is to be legalized gaming, it should be done by the private sector not by the state government.
2 posted on 12/21/2002 7:37:17 AM PST by Sparta
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To: GeneD
I always adore these "gambling is an evil waste of a family's money" articles, because they inevitably mention someone's bingo habit.

I guess good ol' Father Whoozit could have had more concern for the children of his parish by keeping the number of bingo games lower, and setting a limit on the number of cards one could play, but as the guy closest to the situation, he couldn't. So now its the fault of the eeeeeevil casinos and race tracks.

Kill off all but charitable gambling - its for the children.

< /sarcasm >

3 posted on 12/21/2002 7:46:51 AM PST by Chancellor Palpatine
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To: GeneD
Sorry, but the personal failings (yes, FAILINGS) of some should not deprive the rest. Not taking personal responsibility BUMP!
4 posted on 12/21/2002 7:54:50 AM PST by pabianice
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To: GeneD
Not being cynical, just curious:

Since the lottery, etc. etc. are either state run or state endorsed/permitted could a gambling addict and/or his family sue the state? You know, for something like "pain and suffering", "alienation of affection" (the addicted person loses all interest in his family), "no warning that this is addictive". You know, the kind of stuff they trot out against Big Tobacco and the like?

5 posted on 12/21/2002 8:12:15 AM PST by yankeedame
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To: Sparta
I've always kinda figured that people who blow the rent money on the lottery would find some other way to piss it away if the lottery wasn't there.
6 posted on 12/21/2002 8:22:04 AM PST by dwilli
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To: GeneD
"...``I'll admit I was torn,'' Ruth said. ``Obviously I was happy for them because they deserved a break. But what drove me crazy was wondering how many other people who never bought a ticket will now take up the habit, hoping they'll get lucky, too..."

"...Her father, ``whom I dearly loved,'' had a steady job with Hood Milk when the Depression began but lost it to an addiction that would eventually claim his marriage, too. ... ``He loved to gamble,'' she recalls..."

Awwwww...

Poor Ruth...

The product of some day-late-dollar-short whitetrash family, she blames her mortification on the gambling.

And -by God- she'd move Heaven and Earth to see to it that YOU can't enjoy buying a damn Powerball ticket if only she could.

Because, you see, even though she admits that she comes from nothing, somehow she knows everything about what's best for US.

Hey Ruth...

Do the world a favor and take a long walk on a short pier.

7 posted on 12/21/2002 8:22:10 AM PST by DWSUWF
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To: GeneD
It's simply lack of self-control that leads self-destructive people to gamble away all their money. There are those who drink it up, gamble it up and whore it up.

We don't need another law to protect us from self-destructive behavior. We need to instill a sense of values into children, simply by letting them know that they must be responsible for their own lives, that no one will be there to bail them out if they screw up in a big way. The nanny state that so many people propose will not change these peoples' thinking.
8 posted on 12/21/2002 8:29:53 AM PST by renosathug
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To: Chancellor Palpatine; dwilli; renosathug; DWSUWF; yankeedame
I'm surprised the Gamble and Go To Hell crowd hasn't shown up yet.
9 posted on 12/21/2002 8:45:35 AM PST by Sparta
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To: GeneD
Lottery = State Tax on the mathematically challenged.

10 posted on 12/21/2002 8:49:14 AM PST by Fzob
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To: Sparta
I agree 100% Gambling should be legal only for private entities. For the government to be promoting gambling as the way to get rich, instead of hard work and self-reliance, is unseemly at best, disgusting and socially destructive at worst.

Government-run gambling gives people on the lower half of the bell curve the idea that this is a credible and sanctioned way for the downtrodden to improve their lives.
11 posted on 12/21/2002 8:51:05 AM PST by BigBobber
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To: Fzob
I prefer the term "Tax on hope".
12 posted on 12/21/2002 9:02:59 AM PST by Fixit
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To: GeneD
POWERBALL IS $200 MILL.
13 posted on 12/21/2002 9:08:41 AM PST by galt-jw
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To: galt-jw
Excuse me, that would be 215 million for the Dec 21 drawing. With the cash payout of 116.8 million you've almost got the odds on your side (odds of winning the powerball grand prize are 1 in 120,526,770). Then again, that 116.8 million is before taxes...

Never-the-less, I still bought my girlfriend two tickets. Now we can sit around and play the wonderful game of "What would you do if you had $100,000,000?"

14 posted on 12/21/2002 10:24:34 AM PST by the_devils_advocate_666
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To: Fixit
"Tax on hope".

I like it. Much closer to the truth. Mind if I use it?
15 posted on 12/21/2002 12:15:36 PM PST by Fzob
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To: Fzob
Well, I consider myself mathematically challenged. That's why I do play lotto occasionally when the prize becomes big. I only play a few bucks. Hey, you never know. But I do play responsibly.
16 posted on 12/21/2002 3:40:04 PM PST by David1
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To: the_devils_advocate_666
Yup, that's why I play a few bucks when the jackpot becomes so large. I can start dreaming about what I would do with that money.;-)
17 posted on 12/21/2002 3:43:16 PM PST by David1
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To: Fzob
Lottery = State Tax on the mathematically challenged.

My economics professors always called it, many years ago, the 'Inverse Tax on Math Skills.'

18 posted on 12/21/2002 3:47:03 PM PST by Petronski
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To: Sparta
"...I'm surprised the Gamble and Go To Hell crowd hasn't shown up yet..."

They're probably all out buying Powerball tickets while wearing those bignose/glasses/mustache things.

I stay in the Powerball game for one ticket in every drawing. That's about $100 a year, which is chump change in anyone's book these days.

If I ever win I'll set up trusts for my kids and their cousins, build something the church needs and buy a Hummer.

Then, at some point, I guess I'll die and go to Hell for gambling.

19 posted on 12/21/2002 4:24:44 PM PST by DWSUWF
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To: Fzob
It does have a nice ring, doesn't it?

I only wish that I were clever enough to have come up with that phrase. I picked it up years ago from a source lost to time, so feel free to use it all you like.

20 posted on 12/21/2002 6:59:48 PM PST by Fixit
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