
Aug 4, 2018 -- 8:49PM, impossible123 wrote:
Sack Philip Bowcock (PB) and get someone who knows the bookmaking business. April 2020 is more than sufficient time for the head henchos to formulate a new business model that reflects the activities of a bookmaker, and not a casino. The present high street bookies do not produce anything or contribute to society in general - they are the blood suckers of fobt addicts; worse come to worse close the lot of them. Punters do not need them as the internet can more than able to cater or absorb the excess a activities generated should (900 x 4 x 5) shops closures/staff unemployment materialise.
Couldn't of summed it up any better.
If people lose their jobs so what, the jobs are feeding addiction.
Aug 7, 2018 -- 12:33PM, Blackrock wrote:
So many paragons of virtue on here. Big bad bookies and their dastardly FOBT's.Lets be honest here, how many of you really care if some mug does his nuts on these machines? Very very few i'd guess.What really annoys you is the difficulty of getting a decent bet on with the High St. It's always been that way though. As soon as you show yourselves to be 'clued up' - getting on is difficult.Bookies want a profit, we want a profit. Different sides of the same coin i reckon.
The point is the industry exists under the guise of wanting to/taking bets on racing via the huge media gravy train,bookies sychophants and paid advertising thieves which leads the public perception that a struggle between bookie and punter exists and that you can still win.
The reality for those outside the game or a celebrity is very different there is no encouragement to want more bets on the sport whatsoever and they know this whilst continuing down the same road,the same people are still getting paid and keeping their mouths shut.
Everyone wants a profit else what is the point but they want it all ways,they want free money from the clueless gambling addicts whilst underhandedly using racing as a loss leader without having to take any bets ergo they can't lose.
Aug 7, 2018 -- 3:03PM, sparrow wrote:
Dave, I thought the same as both became legalised under the 1961 act.
there wasn't any roulette in bookies - you had to go to a casino and follow the arduous process described.
The whole idea was that high stakes fixed odds gambling (roulette blackjack higher stakes machines) had to be confined to a casino because it was more addictive that horse betting.