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Says who? I think you're making this stuff up, Thunders1.
I'd say you are the one making things up.
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The people who can least afford to play these money games are the very people who are most inclined to play them... they have a dream of lady luck delivering them from their misery... a desperate dream at times... it's why the WV Lottery remains so successful.
Prove it. Prove that its the poor people that have a higher tendancy to place $100 on black than to by a $1 lottery ticket.
Prove that it is the poor man that would pass by 20 bars with video poker machines only to spend his last dime at a video poker machine in a casino.
Prove that a poor person would avoid TriState Greyhound Park like the plague but spend his child's milk money at a casino.
You are being totally irrational.
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Gaming is nothing but an end-around tax on the poor...
More nonsense. I guess that is why Casinos target ghettos and trailer parks instead of businessmen and suburbia. I guess that is why I see all these bums riding around in limos at Vegas. Yeah, if I build a $1.1 billion casino, the first place I would go to recoup my money is center city Philadelphia. Yeah, to heck with trying to get Michael Jordan to come spend his millions. I'd go after all the welfare recipients in WV first.
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it is an artificial industry, in that, there is nothing inherent to the product that makes it any more special in WV than it would be in southern Indiana than it would be at some Indian reservation than it would be in Reno or Vegas. It is a house of cards, pun intended.
There is nothing inherent, industrially speaking, in Snowshoe Resort, Myrtle Beach or the Grand Tetons either. To say that tourism is an artificial business one of the most foolish things I've ever heard. Period!
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No. West Virginia's future is bright as the internet age makes it more and more possible for people to work from their homes, and as corporations reframe their "workplace" around the capacity for people to interact with each other electronically... places like Huntington and Charleston especially are going to become attractive and popular within the next 25 years for their relative peacefulness and proximity to outdoor activities.
Geesh sturt, taking about a house of cards! The internet! Yahoo with a combined net worth of $12 dollars and 50 cents is making billions in the market. Granted, real property is not the only way to create value but the gaming industry has billions of dollars more real property than the e businesses.
You are speaking with no real facts and calling people out for the same. That's my strut!

