John Singleton with Bob HowardRip Van Australia (Stanmore: Cassell Australia, 1977), p. 105, under the heading “Gambling”.

It’s hard to think of an area in which governments are more blatantly hypocritical than in gambling. Gambling is bad for us, unless it’s with the TAB or government run lotteries or pools, or government licensed poker machines and bookmakers.

Why is it okay to bet at the TAB toilets, but not with a local S.P. bookie? Or at the carpeted, air-conditioned casino with free meals and drinks thrown in?

The answer to these puzzling questions is to be found in two things: One is the pressure group juggling that makes up our modern political process. Politicians juggle the money interests (casino owners, organised crime, bribed public officials), against the anti-gambling lobbies of the Churches, Festival of Light, Mrs Grundies, and so on. This keeps the politicians in office. The only losers are the gamblers. The second thing to look at is the government income statistics. Last year (1975-76), gamblers paid $342,000,000 in gambling taxes. This was almost exactly double what it was a mere three years previously: $172,000,000 in 1972-73.

The government should repeal all its immoral laws against gambling and recognise the right of every person to dispose of their own property — including money — as they see fit. Gambling is a victimless activity. It cannot ever be called a moral crime. It should be neither illegal nor taxed.

But we don’t like the odds.
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Further reading for Economics.org.au readers
John Singleton. Horseracing. Why? — John Singleton, “Inside the turf dream,” The Bulletin, July 20, 1982, pp. 44-48.