What does Internet gambling have to do with homeland security?

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I also posted in politics Forum.


Lawmakers are hoping to put restrictions on Internet gambling by attaching their plan to a homeland security bill.

Conservative lawmakers are trying to ban bank transfers to offshore Internet gambling groups by attaching their plan to a bill that fights terrorism. What does Internet gambling have to do with homeland security?

Organized crime and other shady operators run internet gambling sites from offshore to stay out of reach of U.S. law enforcement. The legislation would starve those sites by preventing the use of credit cards, wire transfers or other bank transactions from U.S. companies, according to Rep. Spencer Bachus, R-Ala., the author of the bill.

"This would prevent those who operate these illegal internet gambling sites from being paid and that's what they're after," Bachus said. "You take away the financial incentive and you take away their motivation."

Attaching the proposal to a homeland security bill makes sense to Rep. Jim Leach, R-Iowa. He's worried about the possibility of offshore sites funneling money to terrorists.

"There are intermediary institutions like Internet gambling institutions to launder vast sums of money in ways that are very difficult to trace," Leach said.

Besides fighting crime, the proposal protects the vulnerable. According to Leach, putting the equivalent of a casino in every home is asking for trouble.

"Once people get hooked on gambling, if you can do it with such ease on the Internet, it is pretty hard to resist becoming an addict," Leach said.

The 9/11 anti-terrorist package is scheduled for consideration the first week of October.

Leach said this will be the fourth attempt to get legislation banning bank transfers to offshore Internet gambling groups through the House and Senate. Previous tries were scuttled by the powerful gambling lobby. He says attaching it to the anti-terrorist package is the best hope of getting through their roadblocks.

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No, not "nothing really". Nothing AT ALL. Just a bunch of zealous conservatives who will stop at no end to use 9/11 for whatever agendas they have. Sickening.
 

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I talked to someone that works on government affairs for gaming and he predicts this approach will fail. The bill is too important politically that all riders such as this will go away with any opposition. There is plenty of opposition no matter how they write these things so they can quietly remove it at a late stage but allow these zealots a chance to burnish their credentials in the meantime. He doesn't specifically know it will fail just expects it to.
 

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Just another attempt by the morality crusaders.......can't convince enough people to join thier intrusive agenda, so try to place some crummy rider onto something they think will pass.....like the terrorists are even allowed to gamble by thier creed.....
 

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