MORALITY OF LOTTERY

 

            The main focus of this paper is to discuss some points given by     in his article “”.  In addition, this paper will give emphasis about the morality of the lottery as perceived by. According to   , State Lottery games are by no means a form of civic corruption.    mentioned that Lottery is a form of corruption which changes the habits of the people. Throughout the years, lottery is considered as illegal because of the negative effects that it gives to people who get involved in these activities. However, realizing that lottery can provide positive benefits to the states, especially when it will be legalised, policymakers (14), has considered the legalisation of lottery or game of chance in the United States. Different states had legalised lottery which gives hopes to people who wanted to be rich.     has been able to point the positive benefits of legal lottery to the government. But, upon his investigations, he has able to determine the issue that should be given attention when talking about lottery, i.e. the issue of morality.

            In this paper, some moral arguments that will be given attention which have been posed by     include the following: If the government make lottery a legal form of gambling, then why it is not allowed for private enterprises, what is the moral claim of the government in legalising lottery, and if people are given the choice, why the government are not providing alternative ways on helping people, especially those they considered as poor people.

            As far as     is concern, he pointed out that the government perceived lottery as a game of chance which adheres to moral values. They agreed that since, the government and the states is being benefited by the revenue that comes from lottery and that these revenues are used for different needs of the states, lottery can be considered as moral and that it has its moral obligations. Consequently, the big promise of the lottery is that, the government can do great things with the money earned (, 141). For example, creating scholarships and programs, and boosting the level of educational opportunities to those areas that needs to be given emphasises. However, the arguments that those good intentions have been undercut by budgetary nimbleness in other states are something to think about. And yet, at its center, the whole thing seems shady as the idea that private enterprises are not allowed to be engaged in lottery without the sponsorship or control of the government is another argument.

            Furthermore,       mentioned that the government is allocating high budget for advertising campaign. If the government agreed that being engaged in lottery is a matter of choice, then why does the government tried to evoke its people to join in the lottery and inculcate in the mind of its market some false hopes. For the opponents of state run lotteries, this game of chances is the only possible defense for enabling people to throw away their hard earned money. It is also a libertarian ideology that it is not the state’s enterprise to protect people from themselves. But it is plausible to defend state lotteries on libertarian aspects.

            Furthermore, state run lotteries, are being considered by its critics as the worst of all worlds. According to them, the government allows the strong one to prey upon the weak which is not different from unregulated capitalism. This is done by permitting the state’s tax burden to be shifted towards the poor and by letting, those vulnerable people, or those who are considered as compulsive gambles to be indirectly exploited by the authorities and other people.  The analysis for state-run lotteries also features authoritarian ineffectiveness of socialist central planning, since the state’s legal monopoly provides it every incentive to charge the prices for monopoly itself. In this sense, state lotteries are equally inexcusable in terms of libertarian logic and paternalistic moral values or ethical principles.

            The premise that it is popular for both the public and politicians can be considered as beyond moral principle but can be attached to political principle considering that it is the easiest way to raise taxes and create a new, preferably indirect taxes on the poor. It can be concluded that state lotteries fall n the portion go the populace least who are able to afford the burden.  The excuse that individual choose to incur such burden is specifically disagreeable in a situation in which the state is getting profits from exploitation of human weakness. And the premise that people ought to have a certain amount of liberty to make bad choices does not imply that the state ought to be raising profit by encouraging their citizen to make those choices.

 

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