> he helped people become wary of lotteries and showed them beyond a shadow of doubt that they could be rigged
Yap, I was kind of hinting at that. What you said is a valid way to look at it.
> It's fine to gamble as long as the beneficiary is the state, never mind that on average only the lottery organizer gets ahead.
It's part of preying on the poor. Same with payday loans, and alcohol sales. Having lived in poor parts of town it's common to see all 3 being marketed and pushed heavily in those areas. They might claim they don't want to regulate payday loans because "free markets" whatnot, but state lotteries directly controlled by the government. The pretense they use is that proceeds pay for "education". Except even if it is true, then what happens is that education funds get reduced and used for something else because there are these "lottery funds" coming in. So somehow kids getting scholarships or teachers better salaries doesn't usually pan out as expected.
> then what happens is that education funds get reduced and used for something else because there are these "lottery funds" coming in
That's pretty much what happens, any time you inject funds from a new source into a thing, the other source of fund for said thing tends to get reduced.
Yap, I was kind of hinting at that. What you said is a valid way to look at it.
> It's fine to gamble as long as the beneficiary is the state, never mind that on average only the lottery organizer gets ahead.
It's part of preying on the poor. Same with payday loans, and alcohol sales. Having lived in poor parts of town it's common to see all 3 being marketed and pushed heavily in those areas. They might claim they don't want to regulate payday loans because "free markets" whatnot, but state lotteries directly controlled by the government. The pretense they use is that proceeds pay for "education". Except even if it is true, then what happens is that education funds get reduced and used for something else because there are these "lottery funds" coming in. So somehow kids getting scholarships or teachers better salaries doesn't usually pan out as expected.