Thursday, October 19, 2006

The G.O.P.'s Bad Bet

I have some thoughts on the following op-ed piece that appeared in today's New York Times, but since I'm pressed for time right now, I'll just re-post the piece sans commentary:

The G.O.P.’s Bad Bet
By CHARLES MURRAY
Published: October 19, 2006

Las Vegas -- LAST week President Bush signed a law that will try to impede online gambling by prohibiting American banks from transferring money to gambling sites. Most Americans probably didn’t notice or care, but it may do significant political damage to the Republicans this fall and long-term damage to Americans’ respect for the law.

So, a month before a major election, the Republicans have allied themselves with a scattering of voters who are upset by online gambling and have outraged the millions who love it. Furthermore, judging from many hours of online chat with Internet poker players, I am willing to bet (if you’ll pardon the expression) that the outraged millions are disproportionately electricians, insurance agents, police officers, mid-level managers, truck drivers, small-business owners — that is, disproportionately Republicans and Reagan Democrats.

In the short term, this law all by itself could add a few more Democratic Congressional seats in the fall elections. We are talking about a lot of people (an estimated 23 million Americans gamble online) who are angry enough to vote on the basis of this one issue, and they blame Republicans.

In the long term, something more ominous is at work. If a free society is to work, the vast majority of citizens must reflexively obey the law not because they fear punishment, but because they accept that the rule of law makes society possible. That reflexive law-abidingness is reinforced when the laws are limited to core objectives that enjoy consensus support, even though people may disagree on means.

Thus society is weakened every time a law is passed that large numbers of reasonable, responsible citizens think is stupid. Such laws invite good citizens to choose knowingly to break the law, confident that they are doing nothing morally wrong.

The reaction to Prohibition, the 20th century’s stupidest law, is the archetypal case. But the radical expansion of government throughout the last century has created many more.

For example, all employers are confronted with rules and regulations from Occupational Safety and Health Administration and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission that they regard with contempt — not because they cut into profits, but because they are, simply, stupid. They impede employers yet provide no collateral social benefit. And so employers treat the stupid regulations as obstructions to be fudged or ignored. When they have to comply, they do not see compliance as the right thing to do, but as placating an agency that will hurt them otherwise.

The same thing applies to lesser degrees to all of us who find ourselves doing things that we know are pointless (think of various aspects of tax law) only because we fear attracting a bureaucracy’s attention. For millions of Americans, our day-to-day relationship with government is increasingly like paying protection to the Mafia — keeping it off our backs while we get on with our lives.

The temptation for good citizens to ignore a stupid law is encouraged when it is unenforceable. In this, the attempt to ban Internet gambling is exemplary. One of the four sites where I play poker has blocked United States customers because of the law, but the other three are functioning as usual and are confident that they can continue to do so. They are not in America, and it is absurdly easy to devise ways of transferring money from American bank accounts to institutions abroad and thence to gambling sites.

And so the federal government once again has acted in a way that will fail to achieve its objective while alienating large numbers of citizens who see themselves as having done nothing wrong. The libertarian part of me is heartened by this, hoping that a new political coalition will start to return government to its proper functions. But the civic-minded part of me is apprehensive. Reflexive loyalty to the rule of law is an indispensable cultural asset. The more honest citizens who take for granted that they are breaking the law, the more their loyalty to the law, and to the government that creates it, is eroded.

Charles Murray is a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.

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Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Goddammit

I have never been a Neteller person. The exact reason why is lost to the mists of time, but suffice it to say that all of my online poker transactions since the word 'go' have been handled by FirePay. That is, until I received the following email:

From : info@firepay.com
Sent : Tuesday, October 10, 2006 5:38 PM
To : ""
Subject : New FirePay policy for US account holders

On September 30, 2006, the United States Congress passed the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006.

Once President Bush approves the Act. FirePay (www.firepay.com) will no longer allow US consumer payments for online gambling merchants.

* Beginning the day President Bush signs the Act, FirePay will decline any purchase transactions from US FirePay account holders at any gambling merchant site.
* Ten days after President Bush signs the Act, FirePay will decline any transfer attempt made by any online gambling merchant to a US FirePay account.

All US FirePay accounts holders will continue to be able to make purchases and receive payments from non-gambling, online merchants, as well as “Deposit From” and “Withdraw To” their US bank account.

Click here for the latest news and opportunities for FirePay account holders.

** Please note:

1. This new policy will not affect FirePay account holders from outside of the United States

2. For any questions regarding these deadlines or policy, please email info@firepay.com


Sincerely,
FirePay
info@firepay.com
This is very, very bad for me, because it means if I *don't* cash out, I'm gonna be stuck requesting paper checks or going through the hassle of opening a Neteller account only to have Neteller enact a similar policy. Canadian or Bahamian P.O. boxes are looking more and more attractive.

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Wednesday, October 04, 2006

Yankees-Tigers Game 2

Trying a little experiment -- live-blogging the Yankee game, because really I have nothing better to do now that Bill Frist has swung his personal wrecking ball at one of my pastimes of choice.

8:01 I'm already on tilt - Joe Morgan's face is staring at me from inside my television. What the hell? I thought he called the Mets game at Shea today. Does ESPN really overvalue his stock that highly that he needs to call both games? It's like Def Leppard doing three concerts on three continents in the same day. Completely unnecessary and pointless. Nobody cared, and really nobody wants to listen to Def Leppard on one continent on any given day, never mind three. I can't believe I'm stuck with him for the next three hours.

8:04 First shot of Jim Leyland. I swear he has one foot in the grave. Getting back to Morgan a second, in the battle of the Joes, who's worse -- Joe Buck or Joe Morgan?

8:08 Game hasn't stared and we're already in a rain delay. This is going to be one boooooooooring liveblog, and what's going to make it even more painful for me is that they're letting Joe Morgan run wild. Maybe I'll put the television on mute and go watch some hentai.

8:09 ESPN is *clearly* not prepared for a rain delay, as they've opened their rain delay coverage with shots of Joe Morgan being driven from Shea to the Bronx and discussions of him covering both games. Snore.

8:37 A quick glance at the television in between scenes of bug-eyed Asian teens with gynormous breasts getting pounded by ten-tentacled monstrosities shows Joe Morgan flapping his yapper, but since I have mercifully muted the television, I am tilt-free. I feel bad for Jon Miller, stuck indefinitely in the booth with baseball broadcasting's equivalent of Bill Walton (and a poor man's Bill Walton at that). No signs of starting the game any time soon.

9:03 Bonnie Bernstein is interviewing Jim Leyland. If you look closely, you can see all the Mary Kay products Leyland has caked on his face to disguise the fact that he died during the Carter administration. Still no closer to playing the game. At this rate, I may get to see the new episode of South Park in "real time" after all.

9:19 Who is that stammering yokel with the moptop in the ESPN studio? At first glance I thought it was Alexei Lalas. Whoever it is can't even answer the simplest question without stammering.

Studio guy: Did you ever do anything like [Pujols' home run today]?
Lalas ringer: Uh, uh, uh, Honestly, uh uh... I forgot what I was going to say. Could you repeat the question?

9:21 Shot of Padres pitcher David Wells at a press conference wearing a PokerStars.com cap, and I bet he wasn't even paid to do it. Score another point for Boomer.

9:35 How does Jorge Posada get his mask over those giant Dumbo ears?

9:55 This is now officially the worst. liveblog. ever., as Yankees officials have cancelled the game. At least I don't have to deal with Joe Morgan anymore.

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