17 comments

  • jasonthorsness 2 days ago

    It’s not the betting, it’s the business machine that delivers the betting. This looks the same for any business that makes most of its money only through exploiting some human vulnerability whether it’s social media; shorts, gambling, nicotine, alcohol. Legislation needs to target the industrialization of the delivery not the act itself.

    I think perhaps removing this from mobile devices would address some of the problem. Increasing effort required to participate (when someone might already want to quit) seems like it might work. It could be opt-in: “disallow gambling apps from my phone” setting that takes 10 days to unset.

  • fragmede 2 days ago

    It's not limited to men either. Women can also have gambling addictions. There are many different things to gamble on.

    If you need help, get to a meeting: https://gamblersanonymous.org/

  • eimrine 2 days ago

    What exactly are you responsible for to their families?

    • toomuchtodo 2 days ago
      • eimrine 2 days ago

        Legislation is agression, so do you claim that agression does not create harm? Do you claim agression prevent harm? Or probably you might argue that legislation is not an agression?

        • toomuchtodo 2 days ago

          > Legislation is aggression

          We disagree, that's all. Sports betting creates more harm than benefit, based on the evidence, and therefore is worthy of aggressive regulation.

          Americans increasingly see legal sports betting as a bad thing for society and sports - https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2025/10/02/americans... - October 2nd, 2025

          • eimrine 2 days ago

            I don't argue that sports betting per se creates more harm than benefit.

            I argue that agression per se creates more harm than benefit. The thing is in controlling that requires funds (taxes) and what is more importand abolishing of privacy.

            What are your arguments for disagreeing to consider legislation as agression?

        • clipsy 2 days ago

          > Legislation is agression

          Does that apply to laws against murder, rape, theft, etc? Why or why not?

          • eimrine 2 days ago

            In anarcho-capitalist ideology preventing of all you have numbered and scam is something that no human will tolerate.

            But I notice that we are talking not about murder, not about rape and not about theft.

            • toomuchtodo 2 days ago

              Well, it is theft, by way of taking advantage of humans with a specific brain configuration. Is one free to harm and impoverish one's self? I suppose, assuming robust societal systems exist to house and get said human back on their feet if their addiction takes them down that path. But when it impacts your partner (through domestic/intimate partner violence) and supporting your kid(s) (see my citations in my top comment in subthread), we step in to limit this system from taking advantage of the human not wired to defend against it.

              Sports betting is a systemic vacuum in the pockets of two cohorts; those who can afford to lose and able to stop (ie "entertainment"), and those who cannot stop, or when faced with losses, harm others. Regulation, in this context, is to better protect the latter cohort, because otherwise the sports betting system is privatizing the economic gains while socializing the losses on the rest of us.

              Just as I like taxes, with which I buy civilization, I like regulation, as it protects humans who need protection, even if that means some impairment to what I might consider my own "liberty." "Do unto others."

              • eimrine 2 days ago

                > Is one free to harm and impoverish one's self?

                YES.

                Get your aggression out of my body.

                > Well, it [bets] is theft

                NO.

                I know the government people will happily do anything to increase their domination, to do even more agression in future, that is all the story.

              • 1659447091 2 days ago

                *I'm going to preface this as a take that is a generally unpopular view whose intent tends to be misunderstood.

                At what point do we see our culture of envy or cheap "wins" or the replacement/conflation of present, active, and involved role models with the fast-fashion idol worship of celebrities/sport stars or tech-bro/influencer billionaire as helping to wire the brain in a way that rewards fast money thoughts like gambling.

                When we grow up modestly and have this glamorous fast money jet-setting lifestyle of people who mostly lucked into right time/place/genetics thrown in our face at 30-60 second intervals every 10+ mins everyday of our lives (worse with social media), it's not the betting that we are not wired to defend against.

                If there's a solution to course correct the culture of needing hyper-excessive things & external-validation to feel worthy I dont know what it is -- but if it involved its prohibition I would be against it as being an extension of the problem. There is a correlation between sports events and incidences of domestic violence[0], if we care about sports betting causing violence to others and wish to stop it, then by that logic stopping sports altogether solves even more harm. But cutting the sickly branches of a live oak is not the way to prevent oak wilt from spreading through the community

                Betting is benign in itself, but when the belief becomes that $_thing can quickly solve all of life's problems, people get creative in their pursuit of it. Crypto itself benign, but a tool for quick money; large swaths are harmed financially and some physically (not whataboutism, its related root causes). The war on drugs didn't do so well in their protecting of others either. Targeting bets to shield people from misuse will push it back underground where the most "vulnerable" addicts have 3 problems now. (gambling, law, broken limbs) It also inadvertently reinforces the culture that they are not whole in themselves, enabling them to continue to skirt their part in being responsible for their own life and feelings of worthiness.

                The top comment* here is, imo, one of the more balanced takes in terms of time to impact and coverage over the calls for hamfisted prohibition type regulations. It also minimizes harm by still treating adults as adults but also by sending the message that the predatory behaviour (e.g., gamified mobile betting, betting adverts on Premier League kits) won't be tolerated.

                *"Legislation needs to target the industrialization of the delivery not the act itself." https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45581785

                [0] https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10087409/

                • eimrine 2 days ago

                  > There is a correlation between sports events and incidences of domestic violence

                  What about a correlation between one demagogic law and a hundred ones more? The train principle: allow one unfair action and you will see some more. Crash one window on the street and you will see more. Allow the murderer to murder once with impunity and you will see more.

                  And if you are a state actor - please - get off my family! Domestic violence is not your responsibility.

                  • 1659447091 a day ago

                    > And if you are a state actor - please - get off my family! Domestic violence is not your responsibility.

                    If you are AI please get off the internet. You not only cherry picked a small factoid but completely took it out of context and missed the boat

                    • eimrine 16 hours ago

                      Your comment is 28 lines long on my monitor, my comment is only 6 lines. I understand that I definitely have not reacted to all of the comment. But why not to notice where have I threw the baby out with the bathwater?

                      I can not be AI because my comments are nonconformist and I write the foreign language (English) without checking grammar.

            • clipsy 2 days ago

              > But I notice that we are talking not about murder, not about rape and not about theft.

              I noticed that you literally began your argument with the claim that legislation is aggression ("Legislation is aggression") and ended it with an invitation to disagree ("Or probably you might argue that legislation is not an agression[sic]?"). So I responded by presenting cases in which I believe legislation is not aggression.

              • eimrine 2 days ago

                Legislation (in your cases) is when some nanny state doing two agressive things simultaneusly:

                1. Punish the aggressive actor by another aggression

                2. Make a monopoly of punishing and choosing what to punish.

                [1] is the action which will be done anyway, if nobody punish my neighbour murderer/scammer I will do it anyway because he is my neighbour.

                [2] is a sign of tyranny, lets remember what we are talking about - bets. Bets are not a scam, bets are not a steal. If you and me and the others permit some state to punish for bets, the governmont will see the ability to disallow something else by demagogic justification.

                I do not see anything non-agressive in disallowing bets. I understand that proprietary software does a big work towards making people to bet, I understand that the proprietary bet software might be in a hands of some kid who can easily lost all the family's earnings.

                But hear me please - agressive legislation of non-agressive behaviour is not just agression, it is an opener for even more agression. Killing some murderer is agression which closes the door for futurer murders. The responses in this comment tree compares betting with murdering - why they are spreading such a demagogy? Does anybody really want a nanny state?