Online Gambling Study Bill Waits for Congress
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A bill in the United States to commission a comprehensive, independent study into online gambling will not come up for discussion before next month, at the earliest, after being put on the backburner along with various other pieces of legislation. Congress' priorities The House of Representatives apparently believes that a debate on a resolution on former deputy White House chief of staff Karl Rove should take precedent over the Internet Gambling Study Act, which seeks set up a mechanism to understand the pros and cons of regulating and possibly taxing online gambling. US politics And what makes the Rove resolution such a pressing issue? The former White House official is alleged to have leaked the identity of retired ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV's wife, Valerie Plame, as a Central Intelligence Agency in retaliation for Wilson's op-ed in The New York Times in which he criticized the Bush administration's handling of the war in Iraq. The Internet Gambling Study Act, sponsored by Nevada Representative Shelly Berkeley, was proposed last May and has the support of the American Gaming Association and many politicians. Alas, it will have to wait. The American people are tired of go-nowhere studies designed to fleece the public with no end in sight. Intead of investing taxpayer dollars into study after study, it would be more beneficial to all concerned if Congress would legalize online gambling. This would create a venue for taxation, which most gamblers would not mind so much anyway.
Studies, whereas they should be the basis of sound policy, are cynically used to put off actual policies.. |
A bill in America to commission a full study into the pros and cons of online gambling has lost out in the House to a resolution on former deputy White House chief of staff Karl Rove.

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