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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH

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To: MKTBUZZ who started this subject5/4/2003 2:19:22 PM
From: sylvester80  Read Replies (2) of 769670
 
<font color=red>NEWS:ANOTHER RIGHT WING neoCON HYPOCRITE EXPOSED!!!!</font>
[ed: LMAO at the criminal and hypocritical stupidity of the lying fascist racist bigoted criminal right wing neoCONs. "Book of moral virtues" my ARSE! What a bunch of lying hypocrites!]

Reports: Bennett's losses top $8 million
Magazines claim crusader gets special treatment at casinos

By Katharine Q. Seelye, New York Times

WASHINGTON -- William J. Bennett, author of "The Book of Virtues" and one of the nation's most relentless moral crusaders, is a high-rolling gambler who has lost more than $8 million at casinos in the last decade, according to online reports from two magazines.
The Washington Monthly said on its Web site that "over the last decade Bennett has made dozens of trips to casinos in Atlantic City and Las Vegas, where he is a 'preferred customer' at several of them, and sources and documents put his total losses at more than $8 million."

In an article that depends on much of the same reporting, the online version of Newsweek said 40 pages of internal casino documents show Bennett received treatment typical of high-stakes gamblers, including limousines and "tens of thousands of dollars in complimentary hotel rooms and other amenities."

Bennett declined to be interviewed Friday by The New York Times, with a spokesman saying he needed to digest the articles before responding.

The fact of Bennett's gambling is not new. He has said over the years that he likes to gamble and that it relaxes him.

Bennett told the magazines he has basically broken even over the years. "I play fairly high stakes," he said, but added: "I don't put my family at risk, and I don't owe anyone anything."

The magazines said they had no documentation that he was in debt but suggested he had lost more than he had won.

In response, Bennett is quoted as saying, "I've made a lot of money and I've won a lot of money," adding, "You don't see what I walk away with."

He said he gave some of his winnings to charity and reported everything to the Internal Revenue Service.

The magazines said that in one two-month period, Bennett wired one casino more than $1.4 million to cover his losses.

The magazines said he earns $50,000 for each appearance on the lecture circuit, where he inveighs against various sins, weaknesses and vices of modern culture. But he exempts gambling from this list.

He has said in the past that he does not consider gambling a moral issue. When his interviewers reminded him of studies that link heavy gambling with a variety of societal and family ills, Bennett said he did not have a problem himself and likened gambling to drinking alcohol.

"I view it as drinking," he said. "If you can't handle it, don't do it."

Bennett is popular among social conservatives, but many of them consider gambling a serious problem. . James C. Dobson, the president of Focus on the Family and a member of a federal commission that studied gambling, said in 1999: "Gambling fever now threatens the work ethic and the very foundation of the family. Thirty years ago, gambling was widely understood in the culture to be addictive, progressive and dangerous."

During the 1990s, leaders of the conservative Christian Coalition joined with other religious leaders to create the National Coalition Against Legalized Gambling. Ralph Reed, the former executive director of the Christian Coalition, called gambling "a cancer on the American body politic" that was "stealing food from the mouths of children."

Friends of Bennett were reluctant Friday to criticize him directly.

"It's his own money and his own business," said Grover G. Norquist, the president of Americans for Tax Reform, a conservative advocacy group. "The downside of gambling losses is that the government gets a third of the money, which is unfortunate and probably a sin in and of itself," said Norquist, whose group advocates smaller government.

William Kristol, editor of The Weekly Standard and another conservative ally of Bennett, agreed that this was a matter between Bennett, his wife and his accountant.

"It would be different if he had written anti-gambling screeds," Kristol said. "I'm sure he doesn't regard gambling as a virtue but rather as a rather minor and pardonable vice and a legal one and one that has not damaged him or anyone else."

Kristol said that Bennett was not being hypocritical. "If Bill Bennett went on TV encouraging young people to gamble the rent money at a Las Vegas casino or was shilling for gambling interests, that would be inconsistent" with his moral crusades, Kristol said.

As Bennett told The Las Vegas Review-Journal in 1995, "I've played poker all my life and I shouldn't be on my high horse about it."
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