OpinionAugust 21, 1995
The gambling lobby in Missouri is gearing up for a big push in the coming legislative session to change a few things. They don't like the requirement that riverboat casinos must actually be able to float and get from point A to point B on a river. And they don't like the $500 daily loss limit that protects gamblers from losing all of their savings at one time...

The gambling lobby in Missouri is gearing up for a big push in the coming legislative session to change a few things. They don't like the requirement that riverboat casinos must actually be able to float and get from point A to point B on a river. And they don't like the $500 daily loss limit that protects gamblers from losing all of their savings at one time.

So how are the gambling folks selling these proposed changes? Education. It is a magic word, they think. If enough Missourians believe the beneficiaries of the changes would be schools across the state, they will agree with the casino operators, right?

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Watch out. Missourians were slow to approve the lottery, civic-club bingo and the riverboat casinos. In each case they were promised safeguards and conditions. To take away these shields at this point would be viewed by many Missourians as a double-cross.

It would look to some like voting to legalize gambling with certain restrictions was a crap shoot after all.

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