PPA'S WASHINGTON DRIVE PRODUCES RESULTS
21 August 2009
Getting the word out among politicians is
important
If you've noticed an increase in mainstream media
coverage of online poker issues lately, it's probably
the result of the communications drive in Washington DC
mounted by the Poker Players Alliance and top poker
players last month (see previous InfoPowa report).
Typical of the coverage that has been generated was
a piece in the Washington Post this week by George F.
Will, who interviewed ace player Howard 'The Professor"
Lederer during the drive.
In the article, Will
looks at the historical background of the UIGEA and the
self-interest of some of its proponents, mentioning in
particular the numerous states that have a real interest
in preventing competition for the land gambling groups
which proliferate throughout most American states and
contribute significant pork-barrel tax revenues. Will
claims that on lotteries alone, 42 states spent $520
million promoting their interests in 2007.
The
discriminatory nature of the UIGEA has not escaped Will,
either - he comments scathingly on the exemptions from
US anti-online gambling laws of state lotteries, fantasy
sports and horseracing.
Will observes: "Having
turned gambling, which once was treated as a sin, into a
social policy, government looks silly criminalizing
online forms of it. Granted, some people gamble
excessively (although not nearly as many people as eat
excessively). But never mind whether government should
try to circumscribe a ubiquitous human activity that
generally harms nobody.
He goes on to quote from
his conversations with Lederer, remarking that Congress,
Lederer thinks, should revisit the work of John von
Neumann (1903-57), the Hungarian-born mathematician who,
after working for the Manhattan Project on implosion
design for the atomic bomb, became a defense
intellectual specializing in the relevance of game
theory to strategic thinking.
"Chess involves
logic; roulette involves probability theory. Poker
involves logic, probability and something pertinent to
military and diplomatic strategy - bluffing," Will
writes, quoting "Theory of Parlor Games" (1928) and,
with Oskar Morgenstern, "Theory of Games and Economic
Behavior" (1944) both established works in the field of
game theory.
When you play chess, Lederer says,
there is symmetry of information: Both players have all
the information provided by the location of the pieces
on the board, and both are equally ignorant of the
opponent's intentions.
Lederer is confident that
a brain scan of someone playing poker would reveal a
lit-up frontal lobe, but the lobe of someone watching
television would show up cool blue. A poker player -
unlike someone playing roulette, a lottery or “video
poker” (which Lederer says is a misnomer; it is a game
of chance governed by a machine) - is trying to apply
skill, acquired by experience, to increase the
probability of winning each hand.
"It is a poker
skill to know when to hold 'em and when to fold 'em,"
concludes Will. "Congress probably should fold its
interference with Internet gambling, and certainly
should get its 10 thumbs off Americans' freedom to
exercise their poker skills online."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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