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Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Kirk fears gambling is 'new opium of the people'

Gambling has been branded the new "opium of the people" in a Church of Scotland report presented to the General Assembly today.

The Kirk's church and society council said gambling had been made more socially acceptable by the creation of the National Lottery in 1994.

Internet gambling is also estimated to have attracted as many as 3.8 million regular punters in the UK.

In total, Britons gambled £53 billion in 2005 - the equivalent of over £800 for every man, woman and child in the country, said the report.

And it claimed there was now a culture of gambling which distorted hope and suggested people's problems would all be solved if they could only win the jackpot.

But the report said it was a myth to believe gambling offered a route out of poverty.

It said: "Gambling encourages a kind of idolatry of wealth and indeed one might well argue that gambling, rather than religion, is today the 'opium of the people', to adapt Marx's phrase.

"Gambling subtly reinforces and justifies the distorted values of an increasingly unequal society."

The report said problem gambling could cause people to run into debt, have difficulty holding down a job, put their homes and relationships at risk, lead to health breakdowns and even drive some to suicide.

The Assembly was expected to pass a series of resolutions encouraging church members to challenge the growth of the gambling culture and support those who suffer from gambling addiction; calling on the Government to undertake research on casinos and problem gambling; and urging the Scottish Executive to fund education programmes on the dangers of gambling.

Full story at the Edinburgh Evening News.

Photo: Celtic cross and church

The Scottish Christian News Monitor is updated daily with stories from Scottish news organisations, church press offices and other sources.

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