| Information you can trust
The NCALG Gambling Information Center is a
comprehensive library of the most accurate, up-to-date studies, reviews,
facts and news available. Whenever possible, we have attempted to
provide short articles for those just becoming interested in this
complex topic. We have supported those articles with links to complete
studies.
This information is presented by volunteers who
are dedicated to accuracy, out of a sincere concern for citizens and the
society. The NCALG board members draw no
remuneration for their work with the organization. Neither do any of
them receive any compensation from any form of gambling. The association
does not accept any money or services from gambling interests.
There are many sources of information about
gambling on the Internet. Much of it is developed and paid for by
businesses that profit from gambling. Those businesses know they are
destroying peoples lives and damaging local economies. Still, they seek
to dismiss the devastating social costs of gambling, and pretend that
3%, or 2% or even 1% of the population is a "small number" to sacrifice
for their profits. (One percent is still TWICE the current Cancer rate
in the United States. No one considers that a small number.)
The web site of the American Gaming Association,
the public relations and marketing group for the casino industry, is a
prime example of information tainted by vested interests. The following
is information published by an independent newspaper that looked at the
AGA site:
The
Miami Sun Herald recently found 137 references to the National
Gambling Impact Study Commission Final Report on the web site of the
American Gaming Association.
The commission’s former executive director, Timothy A. Kelly, said,
“It’s absurd for the gaming industry to use our report to support their
position.”
Kelly noted that the
commission - which comprised academics, family advocates, government
officials and representatives from the gaming industry - recommended a
moratorium on expanding legalized gambling in the United States until
better research could be done on its social costs.
To date, he said, very
little of that research has been done. Government agencies lack the will
to fund such studies because politicians have become dependent on the
taxes and campaign contributions that come their way from the gambling
industry, said Kelly, now a professor of psychology at the Fuller
Theological Seminary in California.
— Dolan, Jack and Hoad, Christina, Miami Herald March 3,
2005. “Studies differ on gambling’s benefits, costs: Casinos blamed for
social ills” http://www.sunherald.com/mld/sunherald/business/11036564.htm
NCALG, on the other hand, provides a link to the
entire
NGISC Final Report,
and lets readers make their own decisions. (Follow the "Studies"
link for the NGISC report and other independent research.)
For more information on how the gambling industry
manipulates and distorts research, see the June,
2005 edition of
the Bet's Off Bulletin in the "Bulletins and News" link. |