No Stupid Questions - 141. Is Greed Good?
Episode Date: April 9, 2023Who’s greedier — gamblers or casinos? What’s the difference between betting on sports and entering a charity raffle? And does Angela know the name of her city’s football team?Take the Seven De...adly Sins survey: freakonomics.com/nsq-sins/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Well, look, it's not my chief beef.
Chief beef? What is your chief beef?
I'm Angela Duckworth.
I'm Stephen Dubner.
And you're listening to No Stupid Questions.
Today on the show, is gambling driven by greed?
What is greed? It's wanting more and never feeling satisfied.
Angela, you and I were talking recently offline, and you had taken note of the rather rapid rise of legal sports betting in the U.S., especially through apps like FanDuel and DraftKings. Yeah, I'm inferring that from just seeing these advertisements like all the time.
Oh, yeah?
Because Jason watches basketball and stuff.
And it's like, holy smokes, what is going on?
Yeah, they are out there.
And we can talk about that.
But you also mentioned a book, I think it was written around 2012
by a cultural anthropologist named Natasha Dow Shule.
It was called Addiction by Design.
And it talks about how slot machines in particular induce a state of flow.
And then I think what happened in our conversation is you put two and two together,
and we were also thinking about the series we've been doing on the seven deadly sins.
And you wondered aloud to me whether the so-called sin of greed fits into this,
the degree to which gambling or gaming may be driven by greed. Is that about right
so far, what I've said? That is correct. And it's making me feel kind of greedy because I took up
the space of a no stupid questions listener and put my own question in here. No, no, no,
that's a different dead lease and that's the guilt sin. So I'm curious what your take is on that,
the connection between gambling and greed. And I have a feeling
that mine is going to be very different from yours, but I want to know yours. Let's start there.
Well, I don't actually think that gambling and greed are as related as it might seem. And I do
think there's a relation, which is why I brought up gambling in the first place. Like you gamble
to get money, right?
You gamble to get more.
And I think the heart of greed is wanting more.
And there's a sense in which you will never be sated, right? So when you are surveying people for the Seven Deadly Sins project,
the survey that's on the No Stupid Questions website,
what kind of questions are you asking to measure greed?
So I'm asking the following four questions. Do you take more than your fair share?
Are you self-centered?
Do you behave selfishly?
And this one's just straightforward.
Are you greedy?
Do you want to define greed for us?
Well, I think in general, it's the idea of wanting more
and never being satisfied for your individual
self-interest.
It's often thought of in terms of like very material things like money and possessions.
But I think you could make the argument that it could be much broader than that, like reputational
admiration, attention, etc.
Okay.
So I find your scale and your questions really interesting.
I find them very different from the greed that I think about as you were talking about gambling.
And I personally am a big believer in not taking more than you actually need.
When I think about how certain parts of our economy work, I think of one corner of that
is the money harvesting industry.
There are a lot of people out there who, you know, some of them are sort of gambling. I mean,
if you think about investing, investing is gambling to a very large degree. And yeah,
I think there's an awful lot of greed in the world. And, you know, as I've gotten older and
more experienced about that part of the economy, I'm a little bit less tolerant of people whose lives revolve around making more money when they plainly have plenty of money to do whatever they want to do.
That said, you said that you gamble to get money, you gamble to get more.
I don't actually think that's why most people gamble at all.
I think gambling is a different kind of activity entirely.
Okay, before I agree with you, which I do.
I want you to disagree to some degree.
Well, okay, so there was this meta-analysis of the effects of gambling, or I should say, since it's correlational data, it's just the correlations of problem gambling.
the correlations of problem gambling. So this is people who self-report that they're gambling,
and it's not just the frequency with which they're gambling, but like how terrible it is for the rest of their lives and, you know, this ambivalence they have about gambling. So that's problem
gambling. There was a meta-analysis of what correlates with problem gambling in the general
population. And this is relatively recent. It was in the journal Addiction
in 2021. And the title is A Meta-Analysis of Problem Gambling Risk Factors in the General
Adult Population. And one of the findings that I found striking is that it's not so much your
demographics, like you're a young man, like, oh, okay, well, you should have a problem,
you know, like these stereotypes. A lot of it came down to the kind of gambling that you were doing. And I just want to say this on the topic of like,
is it really greed? What about other motives for gambling? In this meta-analysis, the only kind of
gambling that was generally found to be not at all related to problem gambling was community-oriented.
In other words, like gambling and raffles, like raising money for the local elementary school.
That's not my kind of gambling.
I know people are like, are you even talking about the same thing?
I don't think they know what gambling is, actually, now that I look closer at the research.
Sorry.
I love it when you lapse into the James Bond villain voice.
No, that was slightly different. That was more like a learned German professor,
if you couldn't tell. Okay, I thought that was James Bond villain. Totally misinterpreted.
But look, so I do want to say that I think in general, we should be looking at other
motives for gambling. And I think they do predominate. But you know, what gets you in
the gambling is generally some desire to get more money for yourself. And that would be supported by this
meta-analysis where pro-social, community-oriented risk-taking is not the problem.
Right. I see your point, and I see the point of the scholars, and I'm glad to know there's
empirical work on that for sure. But I think one issue is that there are many different types of
gambling. And, you know, let's compare. You brought up sports betting
because you're seeing these ads from DraftKings and FanDuel and so on. So betting on sports versus,
let's say, playing a slot machine, which I'll just show my bias here. I think slot machines are the
kind of stupidest, most mindless form of gambling. But, you know, some people love them, but you're
literally just shoving money into a machine and pulling a handle. So there's no engagement.
No pretense of skill.
And some people would argue maybe that skill and gambling don't go together that much
anyway. I would disagree. But if you're, let's say, gambling on the outcome of a sporting event,
you know, let's say I'm betting on the NBA or the Phillies winning the Super Bowl,
for example, or the Phillies winning the World Series or the Eagles winning the Super Bowl,
or betting on whether Angela knows that the Phillies are not a football team.
I knew that. I knew that. That was a complete split.
Anywho, what I would argue is that, first of all, there are many different types of gambling. Let's
just be clear there. There's playing a slot machine. There's playing poker. There's sports
betting. There's betting on horses. There's also things like betting on political outcomes.
Now, this isn't an easy thing to do necessarily, but there are prediction markets and some
betting markets are used to be.
And then I mentioned there's investing.
A lot of investing is a form of gambling.
And that's one where plainly the profit motive is strong because the stakes are pretty high.
There's also, I would say, this phrase that I think about all the time, which is gambling on yourself, which is,
I have a path or a goal, and it might be very, very difficult to get to. And the only way I'm
really going to get there is to essentially bankroll myself. I'm going to invest in myself
in order to get the skills and maybe connections and resources I need to accomplish what I
want to accomplish.
And yeah, it's a big gamble.
I'm going to spend X years doing this kind of labor to lay the groundwork or to get these
kind of connections.
And so when we talk about gambling, I just wanted to point out that there is really a
spectrum and that I think a lot of what scholars have studied because it's right there in front of
you and it's pretty easy is the kind of gambling like slot machines where it's very observable
and the data are good. That said, I think something like sports gambling, it's much less
about greed and making money. It's much more about a thrill. It's entertainment. It's excitement. It's fun.
And it takes something that's already pleasurable for billions of people watching sports and then
makes it a little bit more so because now there's a little bit more suspense and there are stakes to
it. So I don't think that I would describe it generally as a greedy enterprise. But then I did
come across this paper that I need you to interpret for me greedy enterprise. But then I did come across this paper
that I need you to interpret for me because it's in the Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology. That's a good journal, yes? It's such a good journal. Yeah.
Okay. So this journal is not about gambling, but it is about greed. And I was trying to make sense
of it, but I couldn't. So I need your help. So this is by one, two, three, four scholars at the
Dutch University, Tilburg University. And it's called Dispositional Greed.
The abstract reads, greed is an important motive.
It is seen as both productive, a source of ambition, the motor of the economy,
and destructive, undermining social relationships,
the cause of the late 2000s financial crisis.
However, relatively little is known about what greed is and does.
So as I'm reading this, I'm thinking, oh, that's so interesting that the greed scholars are
eager to learn kind of the basics about how greed works. Then they write about these five studies
that they developed and a greed scale that they tested to look at things like maximization, self-interest, envy, materialism,
impulsiveness, and so on. So can you tell me what they actually learned in English so that we can
all benefit from this? Well, when you develop a new survey, I did this for the Grit Scale,
you need to show that your new survey is reliable and valid. And you do that in part by administering
lots of other surveys and seeing
how things are correlated. So I think this study debuts a new questionnaire that they've developed,
and then they basically show a lot of correlations with other stuff to validate their questionnaire.
And one of the things that I think emerges is that you have this picture of greed. And maybe I should read some items from their questionnaire because it's short and also it'll give you a real sense of what they mean when they say greed.
So here they are.
I always want more.
Actually, I'm kind of greedy.
One can never have too much money.
As soon as I have acquired something, I start to think about the next thing I want.
It doesn't matter how much I have. I'm never completely satisfied. My life motto is, quote,
more is better, unquote. And finally, I can't imagine having too many things. I mean, feels
very what we would call face valid, which means like, yeah, on the face of it, that seems right.
And I think that's what I was thinking about and what I was saying just now, like, what is greed?
It's wanting more and never feeling satisfied.
So they administer lots of other questioners, but they come to the conclusion that when you score highly on this dispositional greed scale,
like, it's something about you that's across many situations because they don't say, what about gambling?
You know, what about food?
Like, what about et cetera?
They come to the conclusion that, you know, generally the correlates are negative. Like, the higher you are in greed, the more impulsive you are,
the less happy you are, the less concerned you are for other people, the more materialistic you are.
Again, you can make arguments like some of these things aren't bad, but it's a pretty negative
portrait, I think, of being dispositionally greedy. So if we think about the widespread
legalization of sports gambling, and it's gotten really
popular really fast in the US, I do think there are a number of things to be concerned
about.
If you look at the UK, which has had a much longer history of sports gambling, there have
been problems for sure.
I mean, there's certainly a level of addiction.
There are people who get into a lot of trouble.
And so they've done some things to try to curtail that. And I believe that some of those learnings have been ported over into the U.S. where the legislation is written for these firms to try to encourage what they call responsible gambling. But yeah, there will definitely be people hurt by that. Also, the industry is in a strange moment right now because since it
became legal, they're all trying to grab this market share. And some of these firms are plainly
not going to survive. But when I look at the whole landscape of sports gambling or gambling
generally, I think of a guy I know a little bit who has a really different take on it. And I want
to run it past you and see what
you're buying of this take. So his name is Bob Wachtell, and he's a longtime professional gambler.
He's a very highly ranked chess player and backgammon player. He also happens to have a PhD
in philosophy from a long time ago. And he argues that gambling, rather than being a vice or sinful or connected to greed,
is in fact mostly virtue. And his argument goes like this. It's entertainment, as I noted,
but it's better than most because it's interactive, right? Even active.
Because you're engaged. It's not passive. It's not like you're vicariously watching
other people gamble. You're in it.
You're in it. And you are thinking your way through it, which means there's an intellectual component, which is more than can be said of a lot of other entertainment out there.
Most important, he would argue, that it engages you in the idea of probability on a second by second basis.
It also engages you in the idea of multifactorial analysis.
It's complicated. You have to consider a lot of things. And all of these ideas,
thinking probabilistically, thinking about a variety of factors, can be really useful
in real life. And indeed, it's the kind of thing that you wish more people were engaged in all the time, like politicians,
right? So one issue in media and politics and so on is that a lot of people make a lot of
predictions about what's going to happen in the world, or if you will only put your support behind
this policy or program that I endorse, you will see how well it works. And the problem is that most
predictions that most people make turn out, as you know, to be bad. We're terrible forecasters.
We're terrible forecasters. The problem is it's easy to get attention when you're making bold
predictions. And the tragedy is if you can get a lot of attention by making bold predictions,
even when they turn out to be
wrong, that's a problem. And the reason that people are so able to do that, to go on CNBC
or CNN or Fox News and make predictions about what's going to happen, the reason they're able
to get away with that and do it all the time is because they don't really have a stake in it.
You know, you're predicting now something that may or may not happen a year from now or six months from now, but very few people actually track the records of
people who make predictions. But also, you don't really have skin in the game. So when people go
on CNBC to make a financial prediction, well, actually, that's even worse. They actually do
usually have skin in the game. They're talking their own book. The Bob Wachtell argument is that gambling is actually an honest way to make predictions because you're backing it up with
your own money. And therefore, we should look at gambling not as this vice that's practiced only by
deviance, but as a kind of potentially wholesome, interactive entertainment that's got an intellectual component and that
engages you if not teaches you to think more probabilistically and about multifactorial
analysis and if the rest of the world were a little bit more like gamblers in that regard
we might be better off so what do you think of that argument, Angela? You know, it's never the case
that something only has one effect, right? Like, is gambling good or is it bad? There's almost
certainly more than one outcome of gambling. And maybe you could make the argument that some of
the outcomes are positive, right? People are engaging in statistical thinking. They're getting
an immediate feedback loop. Oh, I can tell by your tone of voice you're not...
My derisive tone of voice.
No, but yeah, I guess.
It's more entertaining.
Like, it was fun to watch this football game, but now it's really fun.
I mean, that I really do want to agree.
If it makes it more fun, that's got to go in the positive column.
Like, I was more engaged in watching this game than I would have been otherwise, and I felt better.
Watching the Phillies win the Super Bowl. Exactly. Bet on that. See what the odds are. I was more engaged in watching this game than I would have been otherwise, and I felt better.
Watching the Phillies win the Super Bowl.
Exactly.
Bet on that.
See what the odds are.
And look, anything that people do, there's almost always a reason that they do that does fall into that category.
Why else would they do it, right?
Maybe I could go so far as there is always a reason.
But just to begin, if you say like, hey, isn't it great that people are using their faculties
and like thinking statistically and so forth? Well, first of all, I don't think that people are getting statistically
smarter, even though they're exposed to odds that they get the feedback from because you bet on
something and then the thing happens and then you get punished or rewarded. And so in theory,
we should become better and better statisticians. But in fact, that doesn't seem to be the case.
I don't know that people end up with PhDs in statistics just because they gambled a lot, right? It doesn't seem to connect that way.
I think also there is something about the kind of non-productivity of the use of these faculties.
Like, great, people are doing that, but how about if they actually try to build a bridge? Like,
that would be another way to use statistical thinking or, you know, doing something that has an outcome that is useful for either yourself or others.
So it's kind of that this gambling institution or these gambling inventions that we've created, like slot machines, online gambling, lotteries and so forth.
I think they're hijacking in a way our desire to take risk for gain.
I appreciate your argument,
and I agree with a significant portion of it.
I'll see your argument,
and I'll raise you another argument.
I would say that your argument makes an awful lot of sense,
especially if one is thinking pro-socially,
which is that if someone is smart enough
to be really good at sports gambling,
then we want them building bridges.
But I would say,
well, first of all, I don't know, how many bridge builders do we really need?
Okay. Can I just change that to actuarial science? Like,
sure. Maybe they should be doing statistics for insurance companies.
Actually, becoming an actuary is maybe a pretty good example because from what I understand,
very few young people are really excited about actuarial science. And even though computers keep getting better, I think we need actuary scientists.
We need more.
This is a public service announcement for actuaries.
When I was in high school, and this is like, what, 1987, I think, and I had taken the SAT.
And, you know, immediately after taking the SAT, at least at that point, you would start
getting flooded with brochures or pamphlets.
I think it must have been like based on your test scores. Don't know if that's true today. But I remember
getting a little pamphlet. It was like four by six and had question marks on the front. And it
said, what is an actuary? And I was being encouraged to go into actuarial science.
And were you wildly tempted?
I did not become an actuary, as you know. And I can't even say that some of my best friends
are actuaries. But, you know, these wonderful statisticians who figure out the odds of getting into a car crash or into an avalanche or whatever. Yes, society needs them.
fulfilling. By the way, if you work as an actuary, you still have plenty of time in the evening to be a really great sports gambler. But additionally, this is a little bit like saying, well, wait a
minute, you know, what share of the graduating class of the top 10 undergraduate colleges in
America go to work in finance or in what I might sometimes call the money harvesting fields? And
there are those who argue that, wait a minute, don't we want that brainpower devoted to things like education and computer science and healthcare and so on? So
would you make the same argument about those people? Or is it because finance seems a little
classier, they have big buildings, that you're not so concerned about the waste of brainpower
in that realm? So your argument is that there's a very fine line, if a line at all, between gambling on
a sports app and being like a hedge fund manager.
Is that right?
No, I'm not making that argument.
Although if I were forced to, I probably could make that argument.
I'm just saying that if you're going to make the argument that sports gambling is, quote,
bad because in order to be good, you have to have brain power that would be better applied elsewhere.
Then wouldn't you make the same argument that people who go into finance, when they could also be revolutionizing education and health care rather than making half a million dollars a year for trading some derivatives that they don't even know what's in them?
Doesn't that seem a little bit, I don't want to say hypocritical, but doesn't it seem a little bit paradoxical? Well, look, it's not my
chief beef with gambling that these people could be using their brain. Chief beef? What is your
chief beef? I don't know what my chief beef is, but it's so fun to say. And it brings to mind all
kinds of images of just like cheap beef, you know, grisly and all that. But anyway, I digress. My point is, Stephen,
that it's not my chief beef, my major complaint about gambling that like, oh, I wish this person
were using their brain to do something else. I really worry about how rewarding it is to gamble
and how it just displaces all kinds of other things in your life and can be really ruinous.
So it's not just that I think this person should be doing something
more profitable with that part of their brain. Interestingly, when people get a miss, say on a
slot machine, a near miss is actually rewarding. So sometimes when you don't win, you're like, oh,
like the Phillies almost won the Super Bowl or whatever the team is, real team, real game.
Eagles. Eagles not winning the Super Bowl. But at least in some circumstances, that can also be rewarding.
So I'm just worried that this invention of modern gambling,
and especially some of the machines that we have invented
to allow us to gamble repeatedly with almost no interruption,
those seem to actually be, by the way,
I was just telling you about this meta-analysis,
those seem to be the most pernicious. So the most addictive kinds of gambling tend to be ones that
you can do like very, very fast and almost continuously or without break. You can do it
almost at any time of day. And in fact, I think now you could argue that you could gamble at any
time of day. And again, like that is not something
that existed for our entire evolutionary history. Now we have it and it's getting us into trouble,
at least some of us. Yeah. Can you hang on one second? I'm just trying to get a bet down on this
highlight match in Singapore because it's about to get started. See? By the way, there are commercials
not only for gambling, but I just saw one the other day, and I wonder whether it was because of regulation, but it was an online sports gambling
app, and the whole commercial was like, here are new features on our app that you can use to limit
your gambling. I think that is informed a little bit by countries that have had legalized gambling
for longer, where they see that it's not so hard to find the ways in which
someone can get into trouble and they can try it at least to prevent that. Although I don't know
how successful they'll be. I don't know how helpful those things are, but yeah.
So it's interesting, even though gambling may not, at least according to me, be an exercise in greed
in the sense of, I want more money, right? I'm making the argument that it's not about that.
It's not the primary driver.
I agree with that.
It may be kind of like one of the things
that gets you into it,
but it's not the primary driver.
That's not why people gamble, I don't think, necessarily.
Still to come on No Stupid Questions,
Stephen and Angela look at greed
from the other side of gambling, the suppliers.
I think you have to lay at least a significant part
of the blame on the ecosystem of the private providers and the regulators who are benefiting pretty substantially from the legalization of sports betting.
Now back to Stephen and Angela's conversation about gambling and greed.
Since we are talking about the seven deadly sins and greed, it strikes me that you are saying that gambling is greedy in that it's selfish and that you're using your cognitive gifts or your attention on something beneath your abilities. Is that about right?
I am saying, based on the data in this meta-analysis, that the only form of gambling
that does not have any correlation with problematic gambling is pro-social gambling,
which is like raffling off a fruit basket for the local school, right? I will say this. So there is
certainly some motivation to get into the flow state, to be so one with the activity that you're doing that you would lose track of time and that you would return to the activity again and again.
And that's actually really what I think is going on with this continuous type of gambling.
It's sometimes called continuous play gambling where you can do it repeatedly like again and again.
But I do think it is also true that people start to gamble, at least to
some extent, because they would like to have more money. I mean, people don't like say,
should I do public service or should I go to Vegas? Right. Like there's an initiation.
I will say this. I do remember research from some years back that looked at people who play
lotteries, generally state run lotteries and so on. And it found that lower income people are
much more likely to play lotteries and middle or. And it found that lower-income people are much more
likely to play lotteries than middle- or higher-income people. But moreover, this was the
really scary part, was that a really large share of low-income lottery players said they played the
lottery because it represented their best opportunity to make a windfall that would allow them to do
something like buy a house or send a kid to school. Right. So it was like their one hope.
Yeah. And to me, that's an indictment of a couple of things. It's an indictment of an economy that
doesn't afford opportunity for people. That's bad. And the other tricky part about that is
these lotteries that are
run by the states. I mean, when you look at the take that states get from their lotteries,
states are much greedier than any bookie who ever lived. So when you play a state-run lottery
and you win, you're actually only getting about 60% of the pool of money. The state is taking
about 40%. So if you want to talk about greed, you know,
we've been talking about the demand side of gambling. Maybe we should talk a little bit
more about the supply side. Right. The institutions behind gambling, not the individuals. Natasha
Dow Schultz has been fascinated. I guess there's probably a negative version of that, like disturbed,
frightened by electronic slot machines in particular. So this
book is now, I think, like 10 or more years old. So she was writing, I think, before the rise of
online sports gambling apps and so forth. But she really focuses on Las Vegas and these
slot machines. And she talks about the greed of the institutions, the casinos, right? And maybe that's where the greed and the story is most clear
because she would say from interviewing, and I remember just reading these first-person
descriptions of gambling addicts. These are people who are really, I mean, honestly, Stephen,
just in such a terrible place. They're bankrupt, they're often sick and they're unemployed. I mean, that
may or may not have happened before they started gambling, but it's certainly part of the problem.
You know, as they get deeper and deeper in the hole of gambling, they lose their families,
they destroy their marriages. And when these individuals talk about why they get up again
and go straight back to the slot machines and sit in that chair for hours.
I mean, wearing diapers sometimes, right, so that you don't have to, like, get up.
These are people who don't talk about gambling because of anything that sounds like greed.
They talk about getting into what she calls the machine state, like a state of flow.
But just I want to say that there could be an asymmetry in the motivation.
So there could be on the one side greed from the casinos and other institutions trying to get more and more and more.
They'll never have enough.
The motivation on the individual consumer side is really actually like relief from their terrible lives.
When you're in the flow state, your attention is 100 percent absorbed in what you're doing.
And that means it is not going to all the terrible things in your life
that are causing you pain.
So it's an anodyne, right?
It's a painkiller of a sort.
But these two things in combination,
individuals who want to achieve the flow state
by sitting at this machine and pressing this button over and over again,
pouring their life savings down the drain,
and then these institutions like casinos,
on the other side, that produces this equilibrium where it just goes on and on and on.
And then you have more and more gambling.
If you want a little bit more ammunition against the gambling industry, which sounds like you would.
Do I need it? Yeah.
There was a piece in The New York Times in November of 2022.
There was a big investigation on how the legalization of sports betting in the U.S. is kind of rolled out.
And it's been interesting and it's been intense.
Tell me about this because I'm just noticing these ads.
But like, when did this happen?
When did it become legalized?
So basically, in the U.S. at least, there had only been legalized sports betting in casinos in Nevada.
I think that's right.
I may be wrong on that.
Which is why people would go to these places, right? Like it was worth the pilgrimage because
you couldn't do it in your neighborhood. Like you couldn't gamble in your hometown, right?
Well, you could. There's a thing called a bookie and there are bookies everywhere and always. And
some people would argue that now the states have eliminated bookies by running the lottery. And
you know, states are much less generous with their payout
than bookies ever were. But the state also doesn't break your leg, although, you know,
they require payment up front. So it's a mixed bag. But sports gambling was generally illegal
in this country in most states for a good while. But then the Supreme Court overturned a 1992
federal law, I believe. And this was a handful of years ago. And one interesting part
of the backstory is as states now were voting for themselves of whether or not to legalize
sports gambling, there were these companies like DraftKings and FanDuel that had set themselves up
as fantasy sports websites where you weren't betting money. But because they had set themselves
up, they had already had an architecture and they were ready to spring into action when sports
gambling was legalized. And indeed it was. So it was a very, I would say, long-sighted strategic
play that these and other firms made. Now, not all states have legalized it. I believe that
California recently voted against it, or at least online sports gambling. I think there are around 2018, quote, lobbyists pushing for the
legalization of online betting lavish state officials with gifts, parties, and millions
of dollars in donations, at times skirting campaign finance rules. Many lawmakers proved
pliant. So maybe you're not shocked and outraged by that because that's what happens in state
capitals and in D.C.
I'm pretty shocked and outraged.
It's pretty gross.
Here's some more.
The gambling industry, the Times concluded, backed their arguments for the legalization of gambling with, quote, dubious data, including increases in tax revenue that have been overly optimistic.
that have been overly optimistic.
Furthermore, because the states collect taxes from betting,
regulators have an incentive to help gambling companies get up and running quickly.
Some states let them begin operating before regulators complete comprehensive licensing reviews.
So, look, we've been talking about greed and gambling from the user side, the consumer side, but from the producer and the state side, you can see that
it's an ecosystem where I think you could make the argument that if you feel empathetic towards
someone who gets caught up in gambling as a user and gets in real trouble, I think you have to lay
at least a significant part of the blame on the ecosystem of the private providers and the
regulators who are benefiting pretty substantially from the
legalization of sports betting? I don't know anyone who would argue otherwise, honestly.
Like we said, there's got to be some element of greed to just get you to go into this in the first
place. But it's certainly not the sustaining motivation for why you're gambling. And let's
recall that the odds are against the gambler.
If you want more and more, gambling is not a way to do it, right? So there must be some other
psychology going on in the motivation of the gambler. But clearly, or I'm arguing, and I think
many, many, many others would argue that there's greed on the part of the institutions. The people
are like, let's build another casino. Let's make another app, a better app to capitalize on this
feature of human nature, which is not good, right? I'm not a fan of lotteries by states.
I'm not a fan of online gambling. I'm not a fan of casinos. I mean, I just think these things prey
upon the instincts that we've, you know, again, we have those instincts for good reasons,
but in the modern world, don't do us any good.
So I'm curious to hear from listeners.
I would like to know what's something that you have gambled on in the broadest sense
of the word and why.
And I also want to know if it was driven in part by greed.
So make a voice memo, use your smartphone,
just do it in a quiet place, include your name, what you do, where you live, and send the file
to nsq at freakonomics.com. And maybe we will play it on a future show. So Angela, I think you
and I are fairly split on this. I think I see gambling generally as more diverse and more benign
than you. Would you agree with that? If you see it as diverse and potentially good,
then yeah, I guess I would agree that we disagree about that.
Because it sounds like you're saying in a perfect Angela Duckworth world,
there would be no gambling allowed anywhere. Is that about right?
I mean, I am feeling very Singapore lately. So yes,
I guess I'm feeling like, I don't know if it's paternalistic or maybe you'd call it maternalistic.
I don't think I would rule out all gambling. I also don't think you can. But I do think that
these should be, I guess, regulations and maybe taxes or some way of curbing this institutional
greed that preys upon people's lack of statistical literacy,
their desperation, and their desire for this flow state, which they're achieving through
continuous gambling.
Although, again, I just have to say, there are so many different types of gambling.
And you said that the odds are always against you.
And that is generally the case when you're going to a casino because the casinos set the machines. But there are different types of
gambling again. So if you're playing poker, for instance, you're actually not playing against
the house. You're playing against an opponent. If you're betting in a parimutuel pool in horse
racing, for instance, or in sports betting, you're not designed to lose. They're not designed to
lose. Now, again, the house can take as big a cut as it can get away with. So I'm not saying there is no greed there,
but it's not necessarily the fact that the odds are stacked against you from day one.
But I will say this in the perfect Angela Duckworth world where there is
no legalized gambling, there would be so much illegal gambling.
I didn't concede to that. I didn't say like in a perfect world,
there's like no gambling.
I said, that's not feasible.
So just want to defend myself
against some ridiculous thing.
I mean, like I said,
these are basic human urges.
Take away one kind of gambling,
people are going to make up another
because the way it makes you feel to like,
I mean, how many of us have said like,
bet you five bucks that, right?
Kids do this all the time.
I bet you five bucks that Angela Duckworth has one more thing to say before we end this episode.
Well, I guess if I wanted to win that bet, I would have either zero or two things to say.
Stephen, I have nothing else to say.
That's the last word.
No, I do have one thing to say, and I hate making you win any kind of game or bet between us.
But I want to say this.
Like everything else that we discuss in the broad scheme of sins, there's always some nuance to it, right?
There's a reason why we gamble.
And one of the writers and thinkers on this that we haven't talked about, but I just want to squeeze him in, is Irving Goffman.
And Irving Goffman was one of the great, some would argue the greatest sociologists who ever lived.
And he actually became, I think, a card dealer.
Is that the right term?
He went to Vegas and actually, like, worked in the pit.
Like, he really engaged in this deeply.
he really engaged in this deeply. And I think at the end, he never actually lived to write up his scholarly observations in completeness on what he observed from being in Vegas and being in the
very dark heart, I would say, of the gambling universe. But I will say this to end on nuance.
I think he did think that there was a certain kind of courage and heroism to the risk-taking that is at the core of gambling.
But at the same time, I remember reading this article about somebody who was a contemporary, or at least they overlapped.
So this person later wrote that when Goffman would give talks like brown bag lunches to other academics, he was unsparing in just how terrifying and inhumane much of what he was
witnessing firsthand was. So there could be some nuance here, but I think there's a reason
why greed, and again, here more on the part of the people who create these devices and so forth,
I think there's a reason why they're on the list of seven deadly sins. And though there's nuance,
and there's certainly arguments made on both sides, I think greed is something to be worried about. Excellent point. And I can't wait to spend my
five dollars, Angela. Thank you in advance for sending it to me. Venmo you.
This episode of No Stupid Questions was produced by me, Catherine Moncure,
with our production associate Lyric Bowditch. And now here's a fact check of today's conversation.
associate Lyric Bowditch. And now here's a fact check of today's conversation.
When talking about online sports betting, Stephen says there are around 30, 31, 32 states that allow it currently. He was close. There are actually 33 states that allow online sports betting.
Later, Stephen says that in poker, you're not playing against a house. That's true for most variants,
but there is a version of poker called casino hold'em, in which the player does compete against
the house. That's it for the fact check. Before we wrap today's show, let's hear some of your
thoughts about last week's episode on envy. Hi, Angela and Stephen. I'm Nidhi from India.
As a child, I deeply envied my friends, cousins and neighbours who had pet dogs.
But my parents never allowed me to have a dog in my childhood.
But fostering a few puppies as an adult and switching to working in the pet industry full-time totally killed this envy for me.
I still don't have a dog and no longer wish to have one because they're too clingy, independent and extroverted.
have one because they're too clingy, independent, and extroverted. But I do have to confess that I have two cats now, and somehow I had never coveted them as pets in my life before.
Hi Stephen and Angela, this is MJ Hoxson from the Philippines. When I was young, I remember being
envious of the kind of lifestyle my cousins had. They often went abroad and experienced things only
kids from well-off families could afford.
My mom always reminded us to be grateful for what we have.
I've always kept that in mind to keep envy at bay.
I subscribe to the idea that not all happy people are grateful, but all grateful people are happy.
That was, respectively, Nidhi Srivastava and MJ Hoxson. Thanks so much to them
and to everyone who sent us their thoughts. And remember, we'd still love to hear about something
you've gambled on and why. Send a voice memo to nsq at Freakonomics.com. Let us know your name
and whether you'd like to remain anonymous. You might hear your voice on the show.
You might hear your voice on the show.
Coming up next week on No Stupid Questions,
Stephen and Angela tackle the last of the seven deadly sins, pride.
Look at you bragging that you have more than one floor in your house.
That is just so prideful.
That's next week on No Stupid Questions.
No Stupid Questions is part of the Freakonomics Radio Network,
which also includes Freakonomics Radio,
People I Mostly Admire, and Freakonomics MD.
All our shows are produced by Stitcher and Runbud Radio.
This episode was mixed by Eleanor Osborne with help from Jeremy Johnston.
We had research help from Joseph Fridman
and Dan Moritz-Rabson.
Our executive team is Neil Caruth,
Gabriel Roth, and Stephen Dubner.
Our theme song is And She Was by Talking Heads. Special thanks to David Byrne and Warner Chapel
Music. If you'd like to listen to the show ad-free, subscribe to Stitcher Premium. You can
follow us on Twitter at NSQ underscore show and on Facebook at NSQ show. If you have a question
for a future episode, please email it to NSQ at Freakonomics.com.
And now you can also find our episodes on YouTube. If you know someone who doesn't listen
to podcasts, but spends a lot of time on YouTube, tell them to go to YouTube.com slash at Freakonomics.
That's the at sign followed by Freakonomics. To learn more or to read episode transcripts, visit Freakonomics.com slash NSQ.
Thanks for listening.
So, but, whoops, hang on.
Hey.
Oops, hang on one sec.
My dog wants to get on the desk.
Sorry.
The Freakonomics Radio Network.
The hidden side of everything.
Stitcher.