Re: Bricktown Casino
Originally Posted by
The Old Downtown Guy
A little history as I recall it.
It started with State Legislation that took bingo, played mostly on Wednesday night for pocket change by little old gray haired ladies, out of church basements and into mammoth parlors in rundown shopping centers. The requirement was that said bingo halls must be associated with a non-profit entity such as The Church of What’s Happin’ Now, Do Gooders for Jesus etc.; government regulation at its finest.
Next, Tribes began opening gigantic, colossal bingo parlors on reservation land; followed by gambling compacts with the State that authorized pull-tab games, and today we have incredibly ugly fabric buildings alongside our interstate highways designed to separate people from their money. Many of which I suspect can ill afford to be separated from it.
During the same time period, Remington Park racetrack opened with the promise of increased revenues for schools, and that has turned into a casino of sorts which will continue to slide down another slippery slope; destination unknown.
Has all of this gambling solved any social problems?
Has it generated the much hyped commercial development?
Are our schools or highways better because of the tax money allegedly generated by these gambling enterprises?
Do these examples of government being complicit in what is still an illegal activity if carried out in your garage improve the perception that young people have of government?
Has any of this improved the quality of life for the average citizen in Oklahoma?
We are now only a short time away from implementing a State operated lottery; another enterprise that would be illegal if you ran it from your kitchen even if you gave every penny to charity.
Does anyone see any hypocrisy at work here?
Is this the high moral ground espoused by most of our political leaders.
I think that one must answer these questions before trying to decide if it is a good idea to open a gambling casino in Bricktown.
Please forgive my leap onto this soap box.
I still stand by my post from April 2005, except we can begin to see that the Brad Henry lottery is not going to be the great boon to education that it was hyped to be and the adverse fallout from state sponsored casino gambling is at least as great as predicted.
The Old Downtown Guy
It will take decades for Oklahoma City's
downtown core to regain its lost gritty,
dynamic urban character, but it's exciting
to observe and participate in the transformation.
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