My Side of the Fence

The danger isn't going too far. It's that we don't go far enough.

Off Track Betting (OTB)

When I was a kid, we used to have family reunions at my Grandmother’s farm. The Harrover’s have a lot of family members in the area – when you stay in one place for ~100 years, you will end up related to almost everybody. The reunions lasted hours and hours and mostly the moms took the kids home after Dinner and the Harrover brothers would stay to play cards and tell lies with their old man. They played cards around the dining room table which galled my Grandmother – she didn’t hold with playing poker in the house and required them to cover the table with a sheet. None of the brothers dared challenge that 5 foot nothing lady on that particular rule. You simply didn’t fool around with Granny. I can still remember her calling my uncle John’s name – a man who at 6 feet something towered over her – and him stopping, wheeling and saying “yes ma’am”. Granny didn’t make requests. She issued orders and her boys just didn’t ignored that voice.
That particular image has never really fallen out of my brain. As an adult, I don’t really have any problem with playing a friendly game of penny-ante poker but I expect that my Grandmother’s aversion to the idea is at the root of my problem with using OTB to finance road construction. It’s unseemly. It’s unseemly that in the Old Dominion we would turn to gambling to finance our basic public infrastructre. I don’t like it. I feel like it’s a cop out by the GA and a way to avoid making the hard decisions that need to be made right now. In the age of billion-dollar surpluses our representatives must find a way to provide the infrasturcture our citizens need. I understand that there are philosphical differences on how to do this but it boils down to governance and that, friends, is the one unyeilding duty that all of our representatives share. I can tell you first-hand that governance is hard. It is a demanding task master that requires compromise, communication and sometimes voting for things that you don’t like but it is the job that every single one of our representatives signed up for.

Simply going to Richmond and standing on principal year after year isn’t governance. I could well understand this happening with new issues as the debate over new issues is often framed in terms of principals and that is a good thing. What isn’t a good thing is when this goes on for years and your citizens wonder why you are there at all. OTB isn’t the right way to fix this problem. It isn’t a solution. It’s an abdication of responsibility.

2 Comments

  1. – A hundred years ago, prohibition was a charged issue (Manassas,
    decades ahead of others, went dry by local option by a vote of 85 to 35
    in 1908). Now the state sells booze in ABC stores.
    – Within my lifetime, running numbers was a crime. Now the state
    promotes a lottery.

    The logic, as I understand it, is that people are doing it anyway and
    government has proven a failure at stopping it – in fact creating
    a worse problem (the mafia,etc.) – then reverse course and take
    over for “the public good”. But, where does it stop? OTB? Drugs?
    Bordellos(Nevada)? We are going down a slippery slope and
    picking up speed.

  2. I agree that gambling is not the way to solve our economic woes. It will only lead to more problems. Bordellos however………….just kidding Dog. Anyway, how ’bout them Osbourn Eagles!? Men’s basketball district champs. First tourny game is supposed to be Wednesday but looks like it might be postponed. Keep an eye on the paper or call the Osbourn Eagle Hotline at (703) 790-2050 to get an update on game times. Love to see you there Andy. Sorry for getting off topic.

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