Reflections, Observations, and Analyses Pertaining to the Canadian Political Scene
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
If This Isn't An Indication Of Moral Bankruptcy And Depravity
The two national lottery products (Lotto 6-49 and Lotto Max) are experiencing historic levels of decline for the young adult demographic ... by anywhere from 8-31 per cent.
Perhaps that cohort realizes money, that ever-scarce commodity in their lives, could be put to better use?
Governments, which have grown addicted to the ready supply of cash realized from such gambling, will no doubt huddle with provincial lottery agencies to devise a answer to this terrible problem of parsimony.
Said Andrea Marantz, spokeswoman for the Western Canada Lottery Corp.,
"Lottery is like any other kind of consumer product. We have to expend some effort in (research and development) to just keep products relevant."
Sunday, April 8, 2012
Where Do Justice and Morality Reside?
My reflections were in part prompted by an excellent piece by Martin Regg Cohn in today's Toronto Star about the Ontario government's addiction to gambling, or, more accurately, the putative profits that arise from it. Says Cohn,
We’ve lost our moral compass in recent years — not by embracing gambling, but eschewing taxes. We have been contaminated by the anti-tax compulsions of American political culture that prevent governments from maintaining a progressive taxation system. This pathological aversion to taxation has driven the explosion of casinos everywhere, as governments rely on gambling to take money from the poor while sparing the rich.
Something to think about as we contemplate the dismantling of Canadian values and traditions currently underway at both the federal and the provincial levels.