From Jacob Sullum:

Annie Duke, who testified at a recent House Judiciary Committee hearing on Internet gambling, is not a typical poker player. A professional for 13 years, she is the biggest female money winner in the history of tournament poker.

Gregory J. Hogan Jr. is not a typical poker player either. As his father, the pastor of the First Baptist Church in Barberton, Ohio, explained at a House Financial Services Committee hearing last summer, “Gregory Jr. is currently in prison for a robbery he committed to feed his online gambling addiction.”

While Annie Duke recognizes that most Americans who play poker do it for fun, not for a living, Pastor Hogan tends to overgeneralize from his son’s equally extreme experience with the game, which involved losing hundreds of dollars a day while playing 12 hours at a time. Hogan demands an addict’s veto over Internet gambling: Because his son robbed a bank, he thinks, no one should be allowed to play poker online.

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It’s arguable that the opponents of expanded gambling in Kentucky are making the same kind of demand. Because there are some ill effects of gambling (primarily borne on the individual), no one may have any fun gambling at all.