I’m not referring to the people who gamble once in a blue moon. I’m talking about those who gamble habitually.
How come they’re all such garbage people, with legitimately no exceptions? Take a look at any high-stakes poker table and everyone except maybe the dealer is a de-facto scumbag.
Addicts? I think that’s separate from gambling, but anyone who does it obsessively to the point it makes them a “piece of shit” is is an addict. And it’s an expensive addiction.
I met a guy who had been a pro poker player for years and he was ok, just a person. He quit while he was ahead. I think you do have to be ok with lying to be good at poker, but other than that I don’t think your universal rule holds.
You take that back about Kenny Rodgers!!
I get what you’re saying about gambling and pieces of shit, but you also say, “but not THIS kind of gambler.” I used to play a ton of online poker, but there was no real money. I WAS gambling, and there were in-game prizes and prestige to win, but I think we’d both agree that probably doesn’t make me a piece of shit.
So, let’s put a finer point in it.
A would say that gambling is ESPECIALLY ATTRACTIVE to pieces of shit. The idea of getting rich by doing nothing, is going to sound REALLY good to the same people who would run a scam on your grandma. Throw in the fact that deception is a key element of poker, and you’ve created a game that gives an advantage to con men.
You’re probably right that you’d find a higher percentage of pieces of shit in a group of gamblers when compared to non gamblers, but It’s not the gambling that makes them shitty, they already were, and if gambling didn’t exist, they’d probably just be finding other ways to scam their way to riches.
“but not THIS kind of gambler.”
Pretty disingenuous when “this” is referring to someone who gambles once in a blue moon. i.e. someone who isn’t really a gambler.
Otherwise, I mostly agree with you.
This guys dad gambles
And his mother was a tailor.
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Addictions are often a coping mechanism
If we’re talking about those who show up at high stakes poker tables, they are, at heart, businesspeople, those who you wouldn’t expect to yield to anything/anyone. It’s a demographic thing. They aren’t all bad though.
When I have a child, they can grow up to be whatever they want to be, as long as they aren’t “check 30 lottery tickets at the gas station while everyone is trying to go to work” guy.
It’s always so sad when I see people doing that. What a terrible existence.
One of my colleagues is a former professional poker player and he seems well adjusted to me. He was between jobs and is good at maths/bluffing so spent around a year playing poker tournaments. I suppose the difference with poker is that you are playing against other people as opposed to the house so you have better odds if you are good (although the house has a rake which takes some of the money staked each round).
And, as you said, your friend has the skills to shift his experience from games of chance towards games of skill.
Back when I was a student I also knew fellow students that would play online poker for beer money. Basically there is a dominant strategy for each hand you have, so if you’ve got 4 or 5 games being played concurrently then ultimately you’ll end up coming out in profit.
These were just philosophy students too, not mathematicians. I wonder why more people don’t do something similar. Maybe it requires more self control than you’d expect to stick to the “rules” of the strategy.
It’s still another skill to learn and master. Some folks work on winning hands at poker, others aim to win free beer at trivia. I, for one, can’t bluff to save my life and have the memory of a goldfish so I’d be a horrible candidate for poker haha.
Gambling is very addictive and free money is a powerful incentive for people with little hope.
It’s not just that, but also what these people choose to spend their money on.
Their vain and selfish, but for some reason people look up to them and give them respect.
Well I hardly think people look up to gambling addicts. Considering the lucky few that actually get rich from it are very lucky and very few, there are tons of people who spend money that they can’t afford to spend in the hopes that it turns into a lot of money.
It’s all built in cognitive dissonance, which our minds try to bend by telling ourselves stuff like ‘I have the same chance as anyone else’ and ‘just one more and then I’ll quit’.
It is in its core no different from smoking, drugs or alcohol. There is profit to be made off people who are easily persuaded they need something to make their lives better and if the product is addictive, just a couple of tries can give you a lifetime customer who spends an obscene amount of money.
And yes, usually the people prone to addiction are those who already made a lot of questionable decisions in life and who generally can’t afford such an addiction.
Is it inherently their fault? Well, yes and no. Anyone can overcome these issues if they really want to. But it starts with proper education and the way parents and society as a whole sets an example. And then, should we say that we should ban these addictive things? Drugs are generally banned, yet they are still very prevalent and the illegality causes a lot of violence.
These issues are rooted deeply in our society and addicts are just victims of capitalism who are just too myopic to break free.
Because they have the means (money) to squander it gambling, similarly squandering it on any other vice: self gratification.
It’s incredibly selfish, it’s probably money that could have made an employee’s life better, or a charity more effective.
This makes sense. I agree with you.
Have you lost to one of them by any chance?
No, why?