All About Poker
Even in the 21st century, many shortsighted governments continue anti-gaming (and thus anti-poker) policies for no discernable reason other than habit, and lump poker in with ň€houseň€™ games like roulette. Their knee-jerk arguments hearken back to a day when going and having a flutter was thought to be a one-way ticket to hell.Today, folks know this isnň€™t the case, but government policies havenň€™t followed suit. In the UK, USA and many capitals throughout Europe, the peopleň€™s representatives havenň€™t realised that poker is not only an enjoyable and largely harmless activity, but it can also fill government coffers as well. In a classic case of governments overstepping their bounds, they miss out on billions of dollars ň€“ in return for which they get to tell grown, free-thinking adults what they can and canň€™t do with their hard-earned money.
While the UK and USA are acting like their money will never run out, at least one country is starting to get smart: Bulgaria. Officials from that nation recently gathered to brainstorm how Bulgaria can incorporate gaming into its tourism strategy, and how to find a ň€middle groundň€™ on online gaming.
ň€śGambling tourism is a resource Bulgaria has not exploited. A national gambling development programme needs to be drawn up as part of the tourism industry,ň€ť said Deputy Finance Minister Atanas Kunchev. Itň€™s not rocket science ň€“ you promote what you have, whether itň€™s climate, beaches, culture or gaming. With a possible recession looming and many governments drowning in red ink, as they say in poker: ň€śDonň€™t leave money on the table.ň€ť
Around the felt, that means donň€™t miss bets that you would have won. In government, it means donň€™t miss out on revenue that you could easily have had. And in the UK, that should mean giving people what they want. You donň€™t put a ridiculous 15 percent tax on poker websites, because no one will locate here. Thus, you get zip. A light tax would have brought job-creating websites here to be regulated and taxed. The UIGEA in the U.S. is the same type of mistake. Despite running a huge deficit, the Bush Administration is fighting online gaming in a big way.
Nothing these governments did stopped people from gaming on the Internet ň€“ all they did was miss out on billions in tax revenue that could have been used for the common good. And you can add the recent nixing of the ň€super casinoň€™ to this list of mistakes.
There are fewer and fewer well-paying jobs around these days. We donň€™t need governments to protect us morally. We can do that ourselves, thank you. What we needŇ governments to do is help protect us financially. And you donň€™t do that by leaving money on the table.
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