Should Poker Be A Crime?
Friday, 27 May 2005 17:59As you can read in this blog entry over on Riding the F Train , a number of NYC Poker clubs have been raided by the police. This includes one of the clubs I've posted about before -- including a note that I wasn't going to worry about the lgality. (Bad read on my part.) Everyone in the NYC poker scene is avoiding all games. As far as I know, the club that I visit that is not in Manhattan was left alone, at least it hasn't been reported as one of the raided clubs.
This silliness has gotten me thinking: maybe it's time for a real lobbying effort to legalize poker. I think it's ludicrous that the poker players who sit on Wall Street, and buy and sell stock are permitted to do what they do, but the ones who sat in the Upper West Side Club doing much the same thing get busted.
I wonder: is it really hopeless to try to get poker purely legalized, and out of the "maybe it's not too illegal for players even if it's illegal for those who charge time"? Will cash games in your own home always be illegal? Will the east-coast states ever at least adopt the "not-for-profit home games are permitted" that we already have in Colorado and other western states?
But, I suppose my biggest question would be: would a lobbying effort be successful? Could a grassroots group convince the NY City Council (or, for that matter, any city council or state assembly in the country) to legalize poker? Will open poker games remain the prerogative only of California, Nevada, and one city in New Jersey?
I spent the last five years of my life doing non-profit work, trying to get community members and businesspeople focused on a lofty goal that many people don't think anyone can achieve. I've assisted (in a 501(c)(3)-compliant way) with lobbying efforts in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Maybe I actually have the resume and the skill set to make a go at a lobbying effort to legalize poker? I fear, though, that maybe it's a blind alley. Thoughts?