From Deseret News archives:
Nuclear storage sounds like substantially risky bet for Utah
As religious tenets go, abstaining from gambling is a no-brainer for me. It's not just an issue of morality, it's an issue of economics. I can think of a million other ways to spend my hard-earned money than to feed it into a slot machine or wager it at the roulette table. Being cooped up in a smoke-filled building with people, some of whom are gambling away their rent and grocery money, is not my idea of entertainment.
I say this as a person who has scratched a couple of lottery cards in her day. I played nickel slots in Wendover twice. I've bet on horse racing. I've become convinced it would be more satisfying to light money on fire and watch it burn than to squander it away at a gaming table. Different means, same outcome.
A few years ago, I covered an initiative campaign to legalize horse-race betting in Utah. As you may recall, it failed miserably at the polls. Opponents of the initiative said giving the OK to pari-mutuel wagering would open the door to gaming on Indian reservations, which was another reason to keep gambling out of Utah. Utah and Hawaii remain the only states that prohibit gambling.
I've thought a lot about gaming in Utah in recent weeks in the context of the Skull Valley band of Goshutes, which has negotiated with a consortium of nuclear power utilities to temporarily store spent nuclear fuel rods on the tribe's reservation in Tooele County.
I'm not suggesting that a full-scale Caesar's Palace-like casino would have been the answer to the Goshutes' economic woes. But with that option off the table, the tribe may have landed on a substantially riskier proposition on its reservation: becoming the de facto Yucca Mountain.
The risks are much different, I'll grant you. Most people gamble at their own peril, although the negative impacts of gambling do not confine themselves to the individual throwing down the poker chips or feeding coins into a slot machine. If Mom or Dad bets the mortgage, the entire family's security is jeopardized.
Comments
- NYC mayor: 'Too many guns' 10:59 a.m.
- Tree decorations more traditional 10:56 a.m.
- Apple countersues Nokia 10:55 a.m.
- Auto, bank exec pay package limits 10:54 a.m.
- Keeping your holiday budget in line 10:49 a.m.
- Teen's clique influences gifts 10:48 a.m.
- What's wrong with vulgar words? 10:42 a.m.
- Economic news raises hopes 10:38 a.m.
- Iraqi bomb blast kills at least 6 9:49 a.m.
- Stocks rise on retail sales data 9:46 a.m.
- Disappearance called 'sususpicious'
- LDS to emphasize helping needy
- Defense witness goes on offensive
- Unga might enter NFL draft
- Jazz manage a magical win
- Few details on missing W.V. mom
- Nude bathers cited for lewdness
- BYU football: NCAA awards
- Pitta doesn't win award
- Construction worker injured in jump
- Letters: Global warming a lie
256 - TCU to play Boise in Fiesta Bowl
206 - BYU football: Bronco weighs in on Hall
193 - Palin signs books, chats with fans
167 - Utah/BYU rivalry can be more civil
151 - Cougars going back to Vegas
150 - Andersen apologizes for Jordan hoax
142 - Nude bathers cited for lewdness
128 - Max Hall wants to look ahead
127 - Jazz fall apart late at L.A.
110
Love him or hate him, Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch knows how to get attention.
For the latest news in the health care debate and how it affects you...
Rather than go within to see what it is that is causing the disturbing...
Until ALL credible scientists agree on 'Global Warming', I'll keep thinking...
"Well, actually it was the Russians who defeated Germany in WWII, but don't...
Act as Aryan-like as you'd like ("we don't drink coffee - so we are close to...
Brick walls are better than fences.
Anonymous | 9:24 p.m. Dec. 10, 2009 Over inflated stats against an inferior...
Imagine that; A bleeding heart Liberal point added to the Church Mission...
I'm not a Lakers fan and especially not a Kobe Bryant fan but he is...
Beer: The cause of, and solution to, all of life's problems.
Atta-boy "mark | 9:04 a.m.". Just keep saying, "The information's out there,...


You can be the first to comment on this story.