idea to help get this bill not to pass in the senate

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http://www.fecinfo.com/2006senate.htm

Here is a list of all of the senators up for reelection this year. 33 men/women total. I really think that if everyone from their respected state contacted them and stated that "a Yes vote to the anti online gambling bill would result in a vote for their opponent in the upcoming senate election". I would also stress the point about how many sports bettors/poker players/casino players there truly are, and what us as a whole can do on a tight election race.

Maybe someone else "a much better writer than myself" can write up a quality letter to send to our senators. At first we thought this wouldn't get voted on, but after the senate majority leader said he wants to try and get a vote before recess, now is the time to act.

I know that alot of you have already written but write again, and for those that haven't contacted your senator, take the 5 mins and lets get this bill kicked out of the senate again. It is your right to gamble on the line here.
 

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This bill will not pass and if it does, it will be ineffective.

-Sean
 

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sean glad to hear your positive attitude about not passing, but I disagree about it being ineffective. Sure hard core sports bettors and poker players that want to take the extra steps to gamble online will be fine if it passes, but new players won't go through the all the trouble.

I think that this will also effect forums, handicapping portals, and a number of other sites in the industry that run gambling banners, leading to less quality discussions, less stable books, and poor gambling information on the internet.
 

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floridaguy said:
sean glad to hear your positive attitude about not passing, but I disagree about it being ineffective. Sure hard core sports bettors and poker players that want to take the extra steps to gamble online will be fine if it passes, but new players won't go through the all the trouble.

I think that this will also effect forums, handicapping portals, and a number of other sites in the industry that run gambling banners, leading to less quality discussions, less stable books, and poor gambling information on the internet.


sadly this is one of the best posts I have seen yet FG


....I am trying to have a positive attitude also as Sean but if it passes many things change as you say above....and I do think MANY recreational gamblers will stop and stop quick...that is my gut feeling

but let us keep optimistic
 

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Just find someone unknown who likes gambling to do a Fillibuster :p
 

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Dear Senator name:

With respect to the internet gambling prohibition bill you should be aware that this contravenes a WTO ruling. In essence the WTO found, as a minimum, that any internet betting offered within the US, such as horse racing and lotteries cannot be prohibited from offshore providers, such as Antigua and Barbuda (which brought the case), otherwise there is a restraint of trade. To deny citizens the opportunity to fund offshore accounts for the purpose of wagering on horse racing therefore contravenes the Uraguay round of trade negotiations to which the US is a signatory. Since the US is a leader in promoting free trade around the world I know you will carefully reflect upon the consequences of this bill before deciding whether to vote for a bill that would quash one area of free trade.
 

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<HR style="COLOR: #fdde82" SIZE=1> <!-- / icon and title --><!-- message -->sean glad to hear your positive attitude about not passing, but I disagree about it being ineffective. Sure hard core sports bettors and poker players that want to take the extra steps to gamble online will be fine if it passes, but new players won't go through the all the trouble.


Wait wait wait:

1. Most people wont even know if it passes. Very few people even know about the wire act.

2. How do new players sign up now? As far as I know, they:

A. Use Neteller.
B. Use e-check
C. Use credit cards through neteller or passport or firepay, etc.

Now since the banks can not block any of these 3 methods.

A. Neteller will not fold - they will simply move accounts. If they do fold, there will be 10 new netellers just as when paypal closed down. The best will become the next Neteller.
B. Books will change their bank account as needed to receive echecks. US banks can not block every bank account around the world. Books have been changing recipients for years for WU and bank wires.
C. Firepay and such will get new merchant accounts over and over and in all sorts of names. It will have very little effect on credit cards. Banks already try to block credit cards and you can still use them at neteller and firepay... Why? Because banks can't stop it. Why cant you use credit cards at books? Because books dont want you to use credit cards at books so they dont move their merchant accounts. They'd rather let Neteller and firepay deal with chargebacks and IDS. If they had to, books could take credit cards and some still do now.

I think that this will also effect forums, handicapping portals, and a number of other sites in the industry that run gambling banners, leading to less quality discussions, less stable books, and poor gambling information on the internet.

I disagree - when casino city sued the DOJ about running banner ads, rather than let the federal court decide, the DOJ used the excuse that casino city is not in imminent danger of any type of civil or criminal action to get the case thrown out of court. Casino City is about as big as it gets when it comes to promoting casinos and books ($5million in revenue last year and ads in Time square) The DOJ clearly showed they did not want to decide this right to speech in court and they know if they make a big company go out of business, it will then really be decided in court.

-Sean
 

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OK guys, I must begin by stating that I may be one of the last people to ever vote for Barney Franks if I lived in Massachusetts. However, I believe he delivered the most compelling argument on the House floor against HR4411 and we need to communicate some of his points as strongly as possible to our respective Senators.

If we don't get some sort of campaign started here, then we have no room to bitch if this bill passes in the Senate. As hard as Rep. Goodlatte worked over the past 10 years to get this bill past in the House, Senator Kyl has worked just as hard for it in the Senate. Plus, Senate Bank Committee Chair Shelby has reportedly agreed to allow the Senate version to go directly to the floor for a vote and the Bush Administration has already stated their support for it. I'm telling you the skids are greased.

Here is Franks' speech:


Mr. Speaker, I strongly disagree with the gentleman from Iowa with whom I often agree. I don't disagree with him entirely. I will stipulate that there is nothing in the Bagavagida about gambling. But other than that, I don't think he got much right.He says that gambling on the Internet does not add to the GDP or make America competitive. Has it become the role of this Congress to prohibit any activity that an adult wants to engage in voluntarily if it doesn't add to the GDP or make us more competitive?
What kind of social, cultural authoritarianism are we advocating here?
Now, I agree there is a practice around today that causes a lot of problems, damages families, people lose their jobs, they get in debt. They do it to excess. It is called drinking. Are we going to go back to Prohibition? Prohibition didn't work for alcohol; it doesn't work for gambling.When people abuse a particular practice, the sensible thing is to try to deal with the abuse, not outlaw it.By the way, this bill allows certain kinds of Internet gambling to stay, so apparently the notion is that those few people who are obsessive and addicted will not take advantage of those forms which are still available to them.
But the fundamental point is this. If an adult in this country, with his or her own money, wants to engage in an activity that harms no one, how dare we prohibit it because it doesn't add to the GDP or it has no macroeconomic benefit. Are we all to take home calculators and, until we have satisfied the gentleman from Iowa that we are being socially useful, we abstain from recreational activities that we choose?This Congress is well on the way to getting it absolutely backwards. In areas where we need to act together to protect the quality of our life, in the environment, in transportation, in public safety, we abstain; but in those areas where individuals ought to be allowed to make their own choices, we intervene. And that is what this is.
Now, people have said, well, some students abuse it. We should work to try to diminish abuse. But if we were to outlaw for adults everything that college students abuse, we would all just sit home and do nothing.
By the way, credit card abuse among students is a more serious problem, I believe, than gambling. Maybe gambling will catch up. But we have heard many, many stories about young people who have credit cards that they abuse. Do we ban credit cards for them?
But here is the fundamental issue. Shouldn't it be the principle in this government that the burden of proof is on those who want to prohibit adults from their own free choices to show that they are harming other people?
We ought to say that, if you decide with your own money to engage in an activity that harms no one else, you ought to be allowed to do it. And once you say, oh, no, but that doesn't add to the GDP, and that can lead to some problems in families, then this is hardly the only thing you will end up banning.
The fundamental principle of the autonomy of the individual is at stake today.
Now, I have to say, I understand a lot of the conservatives don't like it because there are people on the religious side who don't like it. Some of my liberal friends, I think, are being very inconsistent. We are for allowing a lot of things. I mean, many of us vote to say, You can burn the flag; I wish you wouldn't, but you can. It shouldn't be a crime.You can look at certain things on television that maybe other people think you shouldn't. You can do other things but you can't gamble. There is a fundamental inconsistency there.
I guess people think gambling is tacky. They don't like it. Well, fine, then don't do it. But don't prohibit other individuals from engaging in it.People have said, What is the value of gambling? Here is the value. Some human beings enjoy doing it. Shouldn't that be our principle? If individuals like doing something and they harm no one, we will allow them to do it, even if other people disapprove of what they do.
And it is, of course, likely to be ineffective. The best thing that ever happens to illegal gamblers is when you do a measure like this.
I hope the bill is defeated.
 

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It sounds all well and good what Franks wrote, but I honestly don't think that most senators give a hoot about the publics freedom these days. What they do care about is votes and being reelected.

They need to understand that there are alot of americans out there than enjoy gambling online whether it be poker, sports, or casino play, and that if it was banned people would still do it, but when election time came, mr gambler the voter would say FU to the senators that voted for this bill. The point that every online bettor can make a difference in the election race is key. They are old men that don't understand how the internet works and probably don't realize just how many online gamblers there are. I urge all of you again this week to email, call, write, do whatever you can to contact your senator and tell them these things.
 

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Great article! Well spoken to. I cant believe there's a chance this would pass, but Bush & the gd religious right are running this country now! If they want it they'll get it...and that is what is scary, right Pope? :pope:
 

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Sorry if some members are tired of hearing about it and you can always call me chicken little if I'm wrong, but I don't think we should let this issue go away in the forum until we come up with a good action plan.

WoodyO, your sample letter was a good start. I think we should get some other talented writers' inputs and refine it further. Then, let the Mods review and approve it and post it somewhere so that all members can send it to their Senators if they choose to do so.

:suomi:
 

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A good form of action would be for someone like Bodog or someone else with deep pockets or a bunch of books together, or a conglomerate of a 1000 of us or whatever to buy a page in the NY Times or USA Today and put in a full page ad:

The US Senate is considering a bill to make all offshore online gambling illegal and to block banks from allowing the associated transactions.

If you believe in freedom and do not want this bill to pass, please email you senater at ___link and express the fact that you feel strongly against this bill and will vote against him in the future if he votes for it.

Anything involving just a couple thousand of us is pissing in the wind.

If they get 1000 emails, they do not care. If they get a million emails, then they care.

Anyone want to put something together? I have thought about writing 1000 books, but dont know what kind of response I will get.
-Sean
 

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The sportbooks need to hire the best Private Investigators in the country to find evidence of congressmen, their closest friends and their family members betting on sports.

It may be hard to do during baseball season, but as soon as football season rolls around, I guarantee the congressmen and people close to them will be making bets. It is just too prevalent in the US. Heck, you can't watch a football game in a roomful of guys and not have someone at least ask "What's the spread?"

Just get the evidence, mail the congressman a copy and watch him start back peddling on this issue.

I think this is the smartest plan.

Later,
Books Worst Enemy
 

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It is only $170,000 for a full page in the Wall Street Journal. You would think it would not be that hard to get 170 casinos/books to put up a grand...

-Sean
 

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Anyone want to put something together? I have thought about writing 1000 books, but dont know what kind of response I will get.

Easier to target sportsbettors. Get a few sites like the RX to take up a collection. I think it'd be better to use this cash to hire some thugs to take the senate out. I'm sure I justed triggered some keywords for the fbi.
 

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TheRX, Wil, etc - would you guys be interested in taking up a collection for full page ads in a couple of national newspapers?

It would prob be best to combine with a couple of other sites in the endeavor.

$100 from 10,000 people is enough for 5 full page ads. I believe each major gambling forum has about 5000-20000 signed up users.

-Sean
 

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2+2 (poker) would be a good one. They've got 50k+ members with many players there making a living out of it.
 

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sean1 said:
A good form of action would be for someone like Bodog or someone else with deep pockets or a bunch of books together, or a conglomerate of a 1000 of us or whatever to buy a page in the NY Times or USA Today and put in a full page ad:

The US Senate is considering a bill to make all offshore online gambling illegal and to block banks from allowing the associated transactions.

If you believe in freedom and do not want this bill to pass, please email you senater at ___link and express the fact that you feel strongly against this bill and will vote against him in the future if he votes for it.

Anything involving just a couple thousand of us is pissing in the wind.

If they get 1000 emails, they do not care. If they get a million emails, then they care.

Anyone want to put something together? I have thought about writing 1000 books, but dont know what kind of response I will get.
-Sean

Some well-placed ads sounds like a great idea. I think the following points could elicit a response from an otherwise disinteresed public:

1. Are you OK with the government regulating the internet in your home?
2. Why is Congress attempting to legislate morality again?
3. Did alchohol prohibition succeed?
4. Why are horse racing and lotteries exempted in the proposed bill?
 

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Nice to see that the Pork Master himself is up for re-election
 

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