Maryland
Gambles With Fascism
by Trevor Bothwell
by
Trevor Bothwell
DIGG THIS
As a resident
of Maryland I've been inundated the past couple weeks with snail
mail spam urging me to vote next week for Question
2, a proposed amendment to the state's constitution that, according to
the language on the ballot, would "authoriz[e] video lottery
terminals (slot machines) to fund education."
Here we go
again: whoring out the kids so the state can rake in more money.
To wit, the
amendment
ostensibly "Authorizes the State to issue up to five video lottery
licenses for the primary purpose of raising revenue for education
of children in public schools, prekindergarten through grade 12,
public school construction and improvements, and construction of
capital projects at community colleges and higher education institutions."
Given that
I generally lead anything but a charmed life, I personally don't
make a habit of gambling. However, this doesn't mean I have a right
to prevent anyone else from entering into voluntary contract with
others around a gaming table. And if I don't have this right, neither
does the state.
If Maryland
wants to profit from gambling – notwithstanding the existing government-operated
state lottery – it could
simply lift its gambling
ban and collect tax revenue from anyone looking to get into
this business. Instead, however, the state seeks to establish
a quasi-fascist monopoly over this proposed new gambling
industry, co-opting a select few private corporations and shutting
out anyone else interested in making a few extra bucks off slot
machines.
Not a bad gig
for those lining up at the trough to take advantage of their political
clout, eh?
Apparently,
Maryland will allow no more than 15,000 video lottery terminals
throughout the state. However, considering the state's only issuing
up to five licenses, this means that each location could have, on
average, 3,000 gaming machines. In other words, the state's getting
into the casino industry at the expense of common citizens who are
prohibited from doing so.
It's more than
a little ironic that Question 2 is being raised as a constitutional
amendment when Maryland's constitution
supposedly guarantees equality under the law. But there's nothing
about equality that justifies the use of force to compel taxpayers
to subsidize initiatives with which they disagree. Whether one is
morally opposed to gambling itself or morally opposed to state-sanctioned
coercion, Maryland has no moral right to victimize citizens
by forcing them to foot the bills for activities they oppose.
But back to
the education angle. The state's pitch is to claim that it
will be able to keep
taxes low if only we credulous folk sign off on this scam. Pardon?
One would think taxes would actually have to be low in
the first place in order to "keep" them that way. However, one of
Gov. Martin O'Malley's first actions upon taking office last year
was to usher in $1.3 billion worth of tax
hikes.
"It was hard
to ask people to do more," the smug thief alleged,
"but it would have been irresponsible to not ask the people of our
state to choose to make progress.''
Ask
people? It's hard to imagine a more audacious, condescending statement.
I've never once been "asked" to "do more" for my state. I have,
however, been repeatedly forced to surrender my own
hard-earned money at the point of a gun.
If Maryland
gets the go-ahead to establish a gambling cartel, whether or not
the state will spend most of its prospective slots revenue on new
schools and education programs remains to be seen, but it's entirely
irrelevant in any case. Is there any doubt at all that the state
will continue to tax income, property, and consumer products as
it simultaneously shovels into its coffers millions – billions?
– in gambling-related revenues? If anything, the more money the
state gobbles up the more it will spend on new government
programs, which will demand continuous funding and only lead to
more oppressive regulations as the state continues to grow
and expand its reach over the rest of us.
The state of
Maryland should not be in the business of gambling, or even education
for that matter. Yet this debate has been framed from the outset
as a tug of war between those who want to see gambling brought into
the state in even greater scope (currently slot machines are allowed
at select horse tracks) and those who don't – with state oversight
and regulation as the common denominator regardless.
Those who favor
slots or other gaming have no right to use state violence to impose
their will upon others, any more than those who happen to oppose gambling
for personal or religious reasons have the right to use the
state to prevent it.
Gambling, like
any other commercial good or service, should be privately available
to any consumer interested in contracting peacefully and consensually
with any producer. The state simply has no business initiating violence
against anyone to either ban or endorse it.
Sadly, however,
if I were a betting man I wouldn’t put my money on the state of
Maryland to uphold its moniker as the "Free
State."
November
3, 2008
Trevor Bothwell
[send him mail] maintains
the web log, Who’s
Your Nanny?, and he is also a contributing author to
the forthcoming Ron Paul biography, Ron
Paul: A Life.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
Trevor
Bothwell Archives
|