poker machines ! You might as well throw your money out the window
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poker machines ! You might as well throw your money out the window in the News
- Tazewell Co. poised to vote on video poker banLincoln Courier2 days ago
The Tazewell County Board will consider a ban on video poker machines as planned, after the recommendation to approve the prohibition cleared a procedural hurdle Thursday.
- Tazewell now closer to video poker banPeoria Journal Star2 days ago
The Tazewell County Board will consider a ban on video poker machines as planned, after the recommendation to approve the prohibition cleared a procedural hurdle Thursday. The board's executive committee rejected a plea to table the matter until the state establishes regulations for legalized video gambling in small businesses, and the issue is now scheduled for a vote before the full board on ...
- Victorian town bans poker machinesThe Age4 days ago
In a win for the little guy, small town of Romsey wins fight against pokies.
Videogame addiction
- Video game addiction: Does it exist?
Is there such thing as a video game addiction? If so, tell me about it. If not, then how can one get so hooked? The quick response is yes a person can become addicted to video games. Some researchers...
Around 52 per cent of problem gamblers said they had borrowed money and not paid it back;
about 36 per cent said they had sold property to raise money to bet; a further 43 per cent said they
sometimes went without food to pay for their addiction; and one in four problem gamblers
suffered divorce or separation. At the extreme end, some problem gamblers have stolen large
sums of money from employers, family or friends, and ended up in prison, while others’ despair
has been so great they have committed suicide
The Poker Machine or fruit-machine or one-armed bandits as they were once were nicknamed have now become widespread throughout all states in Australia.
Unbeknown to poker machine players is that the odds of winning a jackpot are no better than winnin million dollar national lottery prizes.
The poker machine trend started in New South Wales with the Clubs and Pubs like the Returned Services League(RSL) putting in them into their Clubs as a form of 'cheap entertainment' (for the clubs) and as a "cash-cow" for the Clubs themselves. It developed further with the opening in 1973 of Australia's first casino at West Point in Tasmania.
The South Australian Government followed with Adelaide Casino built using the site of the large old railway station in the City. Later Queensland seeing many of their tourists travelling to Tweed heads just over the border of Qld/NSW play poker machines they realised they were missing out on substantial revenue, in the form of poker-machine or Gaming Tax. . By the building of Conrad Jupiter's Resort on the Gold Coast in Queensland in 1987 the Government was able to tap into the market and get useful revenue. Later in 1990 Sydney followed suit with Star City Hotel/Casino opening in Darling Harbour. Of course Western Australia didn't want to miss out neither did the Northern Territory or Canberra in the Capital Territory each building Casinos. We now have saturation, State to State coverage of Casinos in Australia. As a consequence we also now have a record number of problem gamblers...
Casinos exist in large numbers in the United States too. They are far less prevalent in Britain. Perhaps because the Poker machine manufacturer Len Ainsworth is Australian.
"Blow Up the Pokies"
By music group The Whitlam's...
Don’t; don't explain....Lots of little victories take on the pain
It takes so long to earn-You can double up or you can burn,
You can burn And I wish I, wish I knew the right words
To make you feel better, walk out of this place
And Defeat them in your secret battle
Show them you can be your own man again
And I wish I, wish I knew the right words
To blow up the pokies and drag them away
'Cause they're taking the food off your table
So they can say that the trains run on time
Flashing lights, it's a real show
And your wife? I wouldn't go home
The little bundles need care
And you can't be a father there, father there
And I wish I, wish I knew the right words
To make you feel better, walk out of this place
And Defeat them in your secret battle
Show them you can be your own man again; show them you can be your own man again...
And I wish I, wish I knew the right words
To blow up the pokies and drag them away
'Cause they're taking the food off your table
So they can say that the trains run on time
A lyric to the Hit Song Blow up the Pokies by The Whitlam’s the song was a testimonial to Andy Lewis (1967 - February 12, 2000) was the orginal bassist of Australian band The Whitlam's. He left The Whitlam's in the late 1995, and went to Melbourne, Australia to form another band, The Gadfly's. He committed suicide in February 2000, aged 33, battling a gambling addiction.
All States in Australia have Gaming Machines or Poker machines nearly in all the Pubs Clubs and Casinos in Australia and gambling on them has become a very Big Issue. Leading to Bankruptcy suicide, depression & homelessness.
Trouble is as well as the gamblers becoming addicted State Governments have become addicted to the revenue that poker machines generate...
"There's no country in the world that has gambling in clubs and pubs in the way that we do in Australia." Professor Jan Macmillan.
For just over 50 years "the pokies" have been relieving Australian punters of their money. For every dollar spent at the racetrack, $5 is spent on poker machines. And they're not called one-armed bandits for nothing. Australia's 200,000-odd poker machines transfer more than $10 billion dollars each year from the pockets of Australian gamblers to the coffers of pub owners, club managements, and state governments. A jackpot, year after year.
But these profits come at a price. Most research shows that more than a third of the money swallowed by the pokies comes from people who can't control how much they spend. Jonathan Holmes talks to gambling addicts and their families about their experiences with the gaming machines that one counsellor describes as the crack cocaine of gambling.
They explain what its like to be mesmerised in "the zone". One woman recounts how she poured half a million dollars in life savings into the pokies, leaving her with nothing. One man describes how he lost his job, his house and his car, along with the love and trust of his family. Another describes how his mother, in the grip of a gambling addiction, stole more than $2 million from her employer and is now serving a four year jail term.
Problem gambling is not a new phenomenon. The addictive nature of poker machines was openly discussed when they were first legalised in NSW. Yet half a century later the pubs and clubs and governments are still dancing around the issue.
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Comments
abosultely they work on the psychologically proven learning technique of variable positive re-eforcement theory
I've found that gambling don't really care if they win or not, they just like "the action." You are a hundred percent right about the poker machines, Barry. It's virtually impossible to win on them, yet people keep pouring coins into them (or "playing" credits.) All the jai alai frontons in Connecticut have been closed down, but when they were going strong you couldn't help noticing that a large number of patrons were elderly. They were there for the gamblers' "high," and secretly hoping to win "the jackpot" so they could leave a fortune to their grandchildren.
HELP HELP HELP
Thanks for your comments for those that have an addiction cold turkey is the only way to go !












creatingleverage says:
16 months ago
Good hub, Barry.
It has been said that pokermachines are the "crack cocaine" of the gambling world.
They are a plague.