
The game was fixed long before the bets were legal
Hirurg via iStock/Getty Images
Americans were always betting
Critics say the explosion of legal sportsbooks has opened new avenues for corruption. Maybe. But it has also pulled a massive shadow economy into the light. Americans didn’t wait for the Supreme Court’s permission to wager; by 2015, they were already betting an estimated $150 billion a year on illegal offshore sites.
Yes, the sector’s growth has been explosive. And yes, it’s unsettling to see leagues, networks, and sportsbooks growing so intertwined. But that doesn’t make moral crusaders the saviors of integrity.
The real vice
Take Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, who reportedly won $1.4 million playing blackjack in Las Vegas last year — less than 1% of his net worth. Critics didn’t call that a moral crisis.
The point is simple: People should be free to spend their discretionary income as they choose. Cheating is illegal. Addiction is tragic. But gambling itself isn’t a sin against the republic.
The latest pro sports scandal offers a moral lesson, but not the one the prohibitionists want to hear. Legalized betting didn’t corrupt sports — people did. And no law can outlaw greed.
You may also like
By mfnnews
search
categories
Archives
navigation
Recent posts
- How do you solve a problem like Wikipedia? January 11, 2026
- ‘A giant step back’: Liberals rage against red meat after new food pyramid guidelines release January 11, 2026
- Caregiving decisions begin in the bathroom January 11, 2026
- DMW spent P5 million for OFW shelters in Taiwan in 2025 –Cacdac January 11, 2026
- PBA: TNT dominates Meralco to move a win away from Philippine Cup finals January 11, 2026
- MGEN denies buying stake in Leviste”s solar venture January 11, 2026
- From fisherman to Top 6 bar passer: Joewy Ompad shares his inspiring story January 11, 2026









Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.