home.social

#gamblingindustry — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #gamblingindustry, aggregated by home.social.

  1. @gusseting
    I kind of agree with you, about the controling aspects of the #FossilFuelLobby. On the other hand, if not for fossil fuel, there would be other lobbies seeking #StateCapture. It is in the #moneyedClass interest to excert as much influence as money can buy after all. Remember the Tabacco Lobbies of yore? Same thing. Today we can also point to the #GamblingIndustry and increasingly #DefenceIndustries.

    Unfortunately, with power comes #Greed and #Corruption and #TheRich like it that way. All we can do is stay one step behind our #Leaders ensuring we don’t fall too far back. And the only way to do that is through the ballot box, consistent activism and community-led campaigns (including petitions, protest sit-ins/marches and boycotts, etc.).

    I’m hopeful that consistent messaging by communities eventually cuts through to polies and that our govt (of whatever ilk) will eventually push back against #Zionism and its growing influence in everyday Australian social life because it is so egregious atm.

    Also more peeps ought to have a good long think about it all and take a moral and ethical stand vis a vis #Gaza, #WestBank #Lebanon, etc. not much help if peeps keep watching #FoxFakeNews and similar #Cronies IMO.

    In the grand scheme of things, we need to break up #Oligarchies , #Oligopolies and get serious about progressive #TaxReform.

    /getting wordy here, better stop…/

    #Antifa #EatTheRich #OneEarth

  2. 5 Hidden Ways the Gambling Industry Engineers Harm

    Originally Published on January 6th, 2026 at 01:54 pm

    Introduction: The Illusion of Choice

    For many, gambling is seen as a form of entertainment, a voluntary activity where personal responsibility is paramount. We’re told to gamble responsibly. But, if things go wrong, the blame is often placed on the individual’s lack of self-control. 

    But what if that entire narrative is a dangerous fiction?

    A new public health study reveals gambling harm is not an unfortunate side effect of a few people’s poor choices. Instead, it is the calculated outcome of a powerful and deliberate “gambling ecosystem” designed to maximize profit at a severe human cost.

    This system operates using tactics that public health experts call the “commercial determinants of health.” The same strategies used by the tobacco and fossil fuel to drive profit by undermining public wellbeing. 

    This post will reveal five of the most impactful insights from the study, exposing the hidden truths of an industry that has mastered the art of engineering harm.

    1. The “Responsible Gambling” Slogan is Designed to Blame YOU

    The familiar phrase “gamble responsibly” is not a genuine public health message but a strategic discourse meticulously promoted by the industry. The primary function of this narrative is to shift the focus, and the blame, onto the individual consumer.

    By framing harm as a personal failing, it deflects attention. It deflects it from:

    • Predatory industry practices
    • Unsafe products
    • A system that profits from addiction

    This blame-shifting has severe consequences, creating a culture of shame that prevents people from seeking help and isolates them when they are most vulnerable. As the study’s authors note: 

    This emphasis on individual responsibility diverts attention from the practices of the industry. It generates stigma and shame for those harmed. It downplays serious harms caused by gambling. Worst of all: it contributes to the suicide toll. 

    This psychological framing is so damaging because it convinces individuals that their suffering is their own fault, making it harder to recognize the external forces at play and seek the support they need. 

    Are you a professional looking to stay up-to-date with the latest information on, sex addiction, trauma, and mental health news and research? Or maybe you’re looking for continuing education courses?

    Stay up-to-date with all of Dr. Jen’s work through her practice’s newsletter!

    2. The Gambling Industry’s Goal is For You to “Play to Extinction”

    Behind the glamorous advertising and messages of entertainment lies a stark and chilling internal objective. The study highlights a term used by gambling industry representatives to describe their core aim: “playing to extinction.” 

    This isn’t an exaggeration; it’s the industry’s own vocabulary for its business model:

    “…gambling industry representatives describe their aim is to maximise revenue per available customer (revpac), and encourage ‘playing to extinction’, the point at which a customer has exhausted all available funds.”

    The phrase has a chilling double meaning.

    It refers to the financial extinction of a customer’s funds, but in the context of gambling-related suicide, it acquires a much darker significance.

    The industry’s profit model depends on pushing customers into the exact states of financial ruin and profound despair that are known precursors to suicide. It is a business model that treats human crisis as a key performance indicator. Rather than a tragic crisis.

    3. Products are Engineered to Undermine Your Control

    Modern gambling products, especially digital ones, are not simple games of chance. They have been intentionally intensified with features like:

    • Increased speed
    • High complexity
    • “Frictionless” transactions

    All designed to encourage extended use and bypass a person’s executive function. 

    The industry also employs digital tactics like sludging. Deliberately designing interactions to make it difficult for customers to act in their own best interest. Such as withdrawing funds or closing an account. This tactic also manifests physically. For 15 years, the Australian industry has resisted modern, universal pre-commitment systems that allow users to set binding loss limits. Instead, it has relied on a form of physical sludging: “manual, paper-based self-exclusion” that requires a person to fill out separate forms for every single venue they wish to avoid. 

    Product design also deploys psychological tricks to encourage overspending.

    The study points out that a single ticket in the Australian “Powerball” lottery can be priced as high as AUD$46,249.65. This serves as a psychological anchor. While few would buy it, its existence makes spending smaller—yet still exorbitant—amounts like hundreds or thousands of dollars seem reasonable by comparison.

    Need support and not local to the Lehigh Valley? Check out the LGBT National Help Center.

    4. “Good Causes” are Used as a Smokescreen

    A common defense of the gambling industry is that it funds worthy causes, from sports teams to community charities. The research argues this is a calculated strategy to create an “‘alibi’ to legitimise gambling operations” and procure a “social license” to operate. 

    This linkage creates a “symbiotic, reflexive relationship” where community groups become financially captured. Reliant on gambling revenue, these beneficiaries become powerful allies in resisting reforms that could threaten their funding, even if those reforms would reduce harm. This insidious dependency creates a powerful barrier to reform. 

    As one researcher observed, the dynamic is inescapable: 

    … at first the lottery was primarily dependent on the good cause and then, gradually, the good cause became increasingly dependent on the lottery. 

    5. The Gambling Industry Distorts Science and Influences Policy

    Like the tobacco and fossil fuel industries before it, the gambling ecosystem actively works to control and distort the scientific evidence base to protect its interests. The study identifies two key tactics: 

    • Funding “safe” research: The industry funds and promotes research focused on the individual, such as the influential “pathways model.” This model frames gambling harm as an artifact of pre-existing conditions like “antisocial personality disorder,” thereby shifting blame from the addictive product to the flawed consumer. 
    • Discrediting effective solutions: The ecosystem publicly casts doubt on proven harm-prevention tools. The paper cites an industry-linked researcher who claimed that universal pre-commitment systems might have a “detrimental effect and may aggravate the problem.” Crucially, the study notes that a subsequent review of the evidence cited for this claim found “no support for this conclusion,” noting the studies had significant “methodological limitations.” This reveals a pattern of distorting weak evidence to undermine effective public health measures. 

    This distortion of science is coupled with political donations and the “revolving door”—where politicians and staff take industry jobs after leaving office—to block or delay meaningful reforms that could save lives.

    Conclusion: Shifting from Individual Blame to Systemic Accountability

    The evidence is clear: gambling harm is not a simple story of poor individual choices. It is the predictable and profitable result of a commercial system meticulously designed to addict users, shift blame, and protect its revenue streams at all costs. From manipulative product design to the distortion of science, the gambling ecosystem functions as a commercial determinant of health, actively generating and sustaining harm. 

    This reframing moves the problem from one of personal responsibility to one of systemic accountability. Seeing the deliberate system that drives these harms, what does real responsibility—from our governments, communities, and the industry itself—truly look like?

    Are you looking for more reputable data-backed information on sexual addiction? The Mitigation Aide Research Archive is an excellent source for executive summaries of research studies.

    Do you feel your sexual behavior, or that of someone you love, is out of control? Then you should consult with a professional.

    Have you found yourself in legal trouble due to your sexual behavior? Seek assistance before the court mandates it, with Sexual Addiction Treatment Services.

    #behavioralAddiction #commercialDeterminantsOfHealth #darkPatterns #gambling #gamblingAddiction #gamblingHarm #gamblingIndustry #gamblingPolicy #harmReduction #onlineGambling #preCommitmentLimits #predatoryDesign #problemGambling #publicHealth #responsibleGambling #selfExclusion #sludging #sportsBetting #stigmaAndShame #suicidePrevention
  3. 5 Hidden Ways the Gambling Industry Engineers Harm

    Originally Published on January 6th, 2026 at 01:54 pm

    Introduction: The Illusion of Choice

    For many, gambling is seen as a form of entertainment, a voluntary activity where personal responsibility is paramount. We’re told to gamble responsibly. But, if things go wrong, the blame is often placed on the individual’s lack of self-control. 

    But what if that entire narrative is a dangerous fiction?

    A new public health study reveals gambling harm is not an unfortunate side effect of a few people’s poor choices. Instead, it is the calculated outcome of a powerful and deliberate “gambling ecosystem” designed to maximize profit at a severe human cost.

    This system operates using tactics that public health experts call the “commercial determinants of health.” The same strategies used by the tobacco and fossil fuel to drive profit by undermining public wellbeing. 

    This post will reveal five of the most impactful insights from the study, exposing the hidden truths of an industry that has mastered the art of engineering harm.

    1. The “Responsible Gambling” Slogan is Designed to Blame YOU

    The familiar phrase “gamble responsibly” is not a genuine public health message but a strategic discourse meticulously promoted by the industry. The primary function of this narrative is to shift the focus, and the blame, onto the individual consumer.

    By framing harm as a personal failing, it deflects attention. It deflects it from:

    • Predatory industry practices
    • Unsafe products
    • A system that profits from addiction

    This blame-shifting has severe consequences, creating a culture of shame that prevents people from seeking help and isolates them when they are most vulnerable. As the study’s authors note: 

    This emphasis on individual responsibility diverts attention from the practices of the industry. It generates stigma and shame for those harmed. It downplays serious harms caused by gambling. Worst of all: it contributes to the suicide toll. 

    This psychological framing is so damaging because it convinces individuals that their suffering is their own fault, making it harder to recognize the external forces at play and seek the support they need. 

    Are you a professional looking to stay up-to-date with the latest information on, sex addiction, trauma, and mental health news and research? Or maybe you’re looking for continuing education courses?

    Stay up-to-date with all of Dr. Jen’s work through her practice’s newsletter!

    2. The Gambling Industry’s Goal is For You to “Play to Extinction”

    Behind the glamorous advertising and messages of entertainment lies a stark and chilling internal objective. The study highlights a term used by gambling industry representatives to describe their core aim: “playing to extinction.” 

    This isn’t an exaggeration; it’s the industry’s own vocabulary for its business model:

    “…gambling industry representatives describe their aim is to maximise revenue per available customer (revpac), and encourage ‘playing to extinction’, the point at which a customer has exhausted all available funds.”

    The phrase has a chilling double meaning.

    It refers to the financial extinction of a customer’s funds, but in the context of gambling-related suicide, it acquires a much darker significance.

    The industry’s profit model depends on pushing customers into the exact states of financial ruin and profound despair that are known precursors to suicide. It is a business model that treats human crisis as a key performance indicator. Rather than a tragic crisis.

    3. Products are Engineered to Undermine Your Control

    Modern gambling products, especially digital ones, are not simple games of chance. They have been intentionally intensified with features like:

    • Increased speed
    • High complexity
    • “Frictionless” transactions

    All designed to encourage extended use and bypass a person’s executive function. 

    The industry also employs digital tactics like sludging. Deliberately designing interactions to make it difficult for customers to act in their own best interest. Such as withdrawing funds or closing an account. This tactic also manifests physically. For 15 years, the Australian industry has resisted modern, universal pre-commitment systems that allow users to set binding loss limits. Instead, it has relied on a form of physical sludging: “manual, paper-based self-exclusion” that requires a person to fill out separate forms for every single venue they wish to avoid. 

    Product design also deploys psychological tricks to encourage overspending.

    The study points out that a single ticket in the Australian “Powerball” lottery can be priced as high as AUD$46,249.65. This serves as a psychological anchor. While few would buy it, its existence makes spending smaller—yet still exorbitant—amounts like hundreds or thousands of dollars seem reasonable by comparison.

    Need support and not local to the Lehigh Valley? Check out the LGBT National Help Center.

    4. “Good Causes” are Used as a Smokescreen

    A common defense of the gambling industry is that it funds worthy causes, from sports teams to community charities. The research argues this is a calculated strategy to create an “‘alibi’ to legitimise gambling operations” and procure a “social license” to operate. 

    This linkage creates a “symbiotic, reflexive relationship” where community groups become financially captured. Reliant on gambling revenue, these beneficiaries become powerful allies in resisting reforms that could threaten their funding, even if those reforms would reduce harm. This insidious dependency creates a powerful barrier to reform. 

    As one researcher observed, the dynamic is inescapable: 

    … at first the lottery was primarily dependent on the good cause and then, gradually, the good cause became increasingly dependent on the lottery. 

    5. The Gambling Industry Distorts Science and Influences Policy

    Like the tobacco and fossil fuel industries before it, the gambling ecosystem actively works to control and distort the scientific evidence base to protect its interests. The study identifies two key tactics: 

    • Funding “safe” research: The industry funds and promotes research focused on the individual, such as the influential “pathways model.” This model frames gambling harm as an artifact of pre-existing conditions like “antisocial personality disorder,” thereby shifting blame from the addictive product to the flawed consumer. 
    • Discrediting effective solutions: The ecosystem publicly casts doubt on proven harm-prevention tools. The paper cites an industry-linked researcher who claimed that universal pre-commitment systems might have a “detrimental effect and may aggravate the problem.” Crucially, the study notes that a subsequent review of the evidence cited for this claim found “no support for this conclusion,” noting the studies had significant “methodological limitations.” This reveals a pattern of distorting weak evidence to undermine effective public health measures. 

    This distortion of science is coupled with political donations and the “revolving door”—where politicians and staff take industry jobs after leaving office—to block or delay meaningful reforms that could save lives.

    Conclusion: Shifting from Individual Blame to Systemic Accountability

    The evidence is clear: gambling harm is not a simple story of poor individual choices. It is the predictable and profitable result of a commercial system meticulously designed to addict users, shift blame, and protect its revenue streams at all costs. From manipulative product design to the distortion of science, the gambling ecosystem functions as a commercial determinant of health, actively generating and sustaining harm. 

    This reframing moves the problem from one of personal responsibility to one of systemic accountability. Seeing the deliberate system that drives these harms, what does real responsibility—from our governments, communities, and the industry itself—truly look like?

    Are you looking for more reputable data-backed information on sexual addiction? The Mitigation Aide Research Archive is an excellent source for executive summaries of research studies.

    Do you feel your sexual behavior, or that of someone you love, is out of control? Then you should consult with a professional.

    Have you found yourself in legal trouble due to your sexual behavior? Seek assistance before the court mandates it, with Sexual Addiction Treatment Services.

    #behavioralAddiction #commercialDeterminantsOfHealth #darkPatterns #gambling #gamblingAddiction #gamblingHarm #gamblingIndustry #gamblingPolicy #harmReduction #onlineGambling #preCommitmentLimits #predatoryDesign #problemGambling #publicHealth #responsibleGambling #selfExclusion #sludging #sportsBetting #stigmaAndShame #suicidePrevention
  4. 5 Hidden Ways the Gambling Industry Engineers Harm

    Originally Published on January 6th, 2026 at 01:54 pm

    Introduction: The Illusion of Choice

    For many, gambling is seen as a form of entertainment, a voluntary activity where personal responsibility is paramount. We’re told to gamble responsibly. But, if things go wrong, the blame is often placed on the individual’s lack of self-control. 

    But what if that entire narrative is a dangerous fiction?

    A new public health study reveals gambling harm is not an unfortunate side effect of a few people’s poor choices. Instead, it is the calculated outcome of a powerful and deliberate “gambling ecosystem” designed to maximize profit at a severe human cost.

    This system operates using tactics that public health experts call the “commercial determinants of health.” The same strategies used by the tobacco and fossil fuel to drive profit by undermining public wellbeing. 

    This post will reveal five of the most impactful insights from the study, exposing the hidden truths of an industry that has mastered the art of engineering harm.

    1. The “Responsible Gambling” Slogan is Designed to Blame YOU

    The familiar phrase “gamble responsibly” is not a genuine public health message but a strategic discourse meticulously promoted by the industry. The primary function of this narrative is to shift the focus, and the blame, onto the individual consumer.

    By framing harm as a personal failing, it deflects attention. It deflects it from:

    • Predatory industry practices
    • Unsafe products
    • A system that profits from addiction

    This blame-shifting has severe consequences, creating a culture of shame that prevents people from seeking help and isolates them when they are most vulnerable. As the study’s authors note: 

    This emphasis on individual responsibility diverts attention from the practices of the industry. It generates stigma and shame for those harmed. It downplays serious harms caused by gambling. Worst of all: it contributes to the suicide toll. 

    This psychological framing is so damaging because it convinces individuals that their suffering is their own fault, making it harder to recognize the external forces at play and seek the support they need. 

    Are you a professional looking to stay up-to-date with the latest information on, sex addiction, trauma, and mental health news and research? Or maybe you’re looking for continuing education courses?

    Stay up-to-date with all of Dr. Jen’s work through her practice’s newsletter!

    2. The Gambling Industry’s Goal is For You to “Play to Extinction”

    Behind the glamorous advertising and messages of entertainment lies a stark and chilling internal objective. The study highlights a term used by gambling industry representatives to describe their core aim: “playing to extinction.” 

    This isn’t an exaggeration; it’s the industry’s own vocabulary for its business model:

    “…gambling industry representatives describe their aim is to maximise revenue per available customer (revpac), and encourage ‘playing to extinction’, the point at which a customer has exhausted all available funds.”

    The phrase has a chilling double meaning.

    It refers to the financial extinction of a customer’s funds, but in the context of gambling-related suicide, it acquires a much darker significance.

    The industry’s profit model depends on pushing customers into the exact states of financial ruin and profound despair that are known precursors to suicide. It is a business model that treats human crisis as a key performance indicator. Rather than a tragic crisis.

    3. Products are Engineered to Undermine Your Control

    Modern gambling products, especially digital ones, are not simple games of chance. They have been intentionally intensified with features like:

    • Increased speed
    • High complexity
    • “Frictionless” transactions

    All designed to encourage extended use and bypass a person’s executive function. 

    The industry also employs digital tactics like sludging. Deliberately designing interactions to make it difficult for customers to act in their own best interest. Such as withdrawing funds or closing an account. This tactic also manifests physically. For 15 years, the Australian industry has resisted modern, universal pre-commitment systems that allow users to set binding loss limits. Instead, it has relied on a form of physical sludging: “manual, paper-based self-exclusion” that requires a person to fill out separate forms for every single venue they wish to avoid. 

    Product design also deploys psychological tricks to encourage overspending.

    The study points out that a single ticket in the Australian “Powerball” lottery can be priced as high as AUD$46,249.65. This serves as a psychological anchor. While few would buy it, its existence makes spending smaller—yet still exorbitant—amounts like hundreds or thousands of dollars seem reasonable by comparison.

    Need support and not local to the Lehigh Valley? Check out the LGBT National Help Center.

    4. “Good Causes” are Used as a Smokescreen

    A common defense of the gambling industry is that it funds worthy causes, from sports teams to community charities. The research argues this is a calculated strategy to create an “‘alibi’ to legitimise gambling operations” and procure a “social license” to operate. 

    This linkage creates a “symbiotic, reflexive relationship” where community groups become financially captured. Reliant on gambling revenue, these beneficiaries become powerful allies in resisting reforms that could threaten their funding, even if those reforms would reduce harm. This insidious dependency creates a powerful barrier to reform. 

    As one researcher observed, the dynamic is inescapable: 

    … at first the lottery was primarily dependent on the good cause and then, gradually, the good cause became increasingly dependent on the lottery. 

    5. The Gambling Industry Distorts Science and Influences Policy

    Like the tobacco and fossil fuel industries before it, the gambling ecosystem actively works to control and distort the scientific evidence base to protect its interests. The study identifies two key tactics: 

    • Funding “safe” research: The industry funds and promotes research focused on the individual, such as the influential “pathways model.” This model frames gambling harm as an artifact of pre-existing conditions like “antisocial personality disorder,” thereby shifting blame from the addictive product to the flawed consumer. 
    • Discrediting effective solutions: The ecosystem publicly casts doubt on proven harm-prevention tools. The paper cites an industry-linked researcher who claimed that universal pre-commitment systems might have a “detrimental effect and may aggravate the problem.” Crucially, the study notes that a subsequent review of the evidence cited for this claim found “no support for this conclusion,” noting the studies had significant “methodological limitations.” This reveals a pattern of distorting weak evidence to undermine effective public health measures. 

    This distortion of science is coupled with political donations and the “revolving door”—where politicians and staff take industry jobs after leaving office—to block or delay meaningful reforms that could save lives.

    Conclusion: Shifting from Individual Blame to Systemic Accountability

    The evidence is clear: gambling harm is not a simple story of poor individual choices. It is the predictable and profitable result of a commercial system meticulously designed to addict users, shift blame, and protect its revenue streams at all costs. From manipulative product design to the distortion of science, the gambling ecosystem functions as a commercial determinant of health, actively generating and sustaining harm. 

    This reframing moves the problem from one of personal responsibility to one of systemic accountability. Seeing the deliberate system that drives these harms, what does real responsibility—from our governments, communities, and the industry itself—truly look like?

    Are you looking for more reputable data-backed information on sexual addiction? The Mitigation Aide Research Archive is an excellent source for executive summaries of research studies.

    Do you feel your sexual behavior, or that of someone you love, is out of control? Then you should consult with a professional.

    Have you found yourself in legal trouble due to your sexual behavior? Seek assistance before the court mandates it, with Sexual Addiction Treatment Services.

    #behavioralAddiction #commercialDeterminantsOfHealth #darkPatterns #gambling #gamblingAddiction #gamblingHarm #gamblingIndustry #gamblingPolicy #harmReduction #onlineGambling #preCommitmentLimits #predatoryDesign #problemGambling #publicHealth #responsibleGambling #selfExclusion #sludging #sportsBetting #stigmaAndShame #suicidePrevention
  5. 5 Hidden Ways the Gambling Industry Engineers Harm

    Originally Published on January 6th, 2026 at 01:54 pm

    Introduction: The Illusion of Choice

    For many, gambling is seen as a form of entertainment, a voluntary activity where personal responsibility is paramount. We’re told to gamble responsibly. But, if things go wrong, the blame is often placed on the individual’s lack of self-control. 

    But what if that entire narrative is a dangerous fiction?

    A new public health study reveals gambling harm is not an unfortunate side effect of a few people’s poor choices. Instead, it is the calculated outcome of a powerful and deliberate “gambling ecosystem” designed to maximize profit at a severe human cost.

    This system operates using tactics that public health experts call the “commercial determinants of health.” The same strategies used by the tobacco and fossil fuel to drive profit by undermining public wellbeing. 

    This post will reveal five of the most impactful insights from the study, exposing the hidden truths of an industry that has mastered the art of engineering harm.

    1. The “Responsible Gambling” Slogan is Designed to Blame YOU

    The familiar phrase “gamble responsibly” is not a genuine public health message but a strategic discourse meticulously promoted by the industry. The primary function of this narrative is to shift the focus, and the blame, onto the individual consumer.

    By framing harm as a personal failing, it deflects attention. It deflects it from:

    • Predatory industry practices
    • Unsafe products
    • A system that profits from addiction

    This blame-shifting has severe consequences, creating a culture of shame that prevents people from seeking help and isolates them when they are most vulnerable. As the study’s authors note: 

    This emphasis on individual responsibility diverts attention from the practices of the industry. It generates stigma and shame for those harmed. It downplays serious harms caused by gambling. Worst of all: it contributes to the suicide toll. 

    This psychological framing is so damaging because it convinces individuals that their suffering is their own fault, making it harder to recognize the external forces at play and seek the support they need. 

    Are you a professional looking to stay up-to-date with the latest information on, sex addiction, trauma, and mental health news and research? Or maybe you’re looking for continuing education courses?

    Stay up-to-date with all of Dr. Jen’s work through her practice’s newsletter!

    2. The Gambling Industry’s Goal is For You to “Play to Extinction”

    Behind the glamorous advertising and messages of entertainment lies a stark and chilling internal objective. The study highlights a term used by gambling industry representatives to describe their core aim: “playing to extinction.” 

    This isn’t an exaggeration; it’s the industry’s own vocabulary for its business model:

    “…gambling industry representatives describe their aim is to maximise revenue per available customer (revpac), and encourage ‘playing to extinction’, the point at which a customer has exhausted all available funds.”

    The phrase has a chilling double meaning.

    It refers to the financial extinction of a customer’s funds, but in the context of gambling-related suicide, it acquires a much darker significance.

    The industry’s profit model depends on pushing customers into the exact states of financial ruin and profound despair that are known precursors to suicide. It is a business model that treats human crisis as a key performance indicator. Rather than a tragic crisis.

    3. Products are Engineered to Undermine Your Control

    Modern gambling products, especially digital ones, are not simple games of chance. They have been intentionally intensified with features like:

    • Increased speed
    • High complexity
    • “Frictionless” transactions

    All designed to encourage extended use and bypass a person’s executive function. 

    The industry also employs digital tactics like sludging. Deliberately designing interactions to make it difficult for customers to act in their own best interest. Such as withdrawing funds or closing an account. This tactic also manifests physically. For 15 years, the Australian industry has resisted modern, universal pre-commitment systems that allow users to set binding loss limits. Instead, it has relied on a form of physical sludging: “manual, paper-based self-exclusion” that requires a person to fill out separate forms for every single venue they wish to avoid. 

    Product design also deploys psychological tricks to encourage overspending.

    The study points out that a single ticket in the Australian “Powerball” lottery can be priced as high as AUD$46,249.65. This serves as a psychological anchor. While few would buy it, its existence makes spending smaller—yet still exorbitant—amounts like hundreds or thousands of dollars seem reasonable by comparison.

    Need support and not local to the Lehigh Valley? Check out the LGBT National Help Center.

    4. “Good Causes” are Used as a Smokescreen

    A common defense of the gambling industry is that it funds worthy causes, from sports teams to community charities. The research argues this is a calculated strategy to create an “‘alibi’ to legitimise gambling operations” and procure a “social license” to operate. 

    This linkage creates a “symbiotic, reflexive relationship” where community groups become financially captured. Reliant on gambling revenue, these beneficiaries become powerful allies in resisting reforms that could threaten their funding, even if those reforms would reduce harm. This insidious dependency creates a powerful barrier to reform. 

    As one researcher observed, the dynamic is inescapable: 

    … at first the lottery was primarily dependent on the good cause and then, gradually, the good cause became increasingly dependent on the lottery. 

    5. The Gambling Industry Distorts Science and Influences Policy

    Like the tobacco and fossil fuel industries before it, the gambling ecosystem actively works to control and distort the scientific evidence base to protect its interests. The study identifies two key tactics: 

    • Funding “safe” research: The industry funds and promotes research focused on the individual, such as the influential “pathways model.” This model frames gambling harm as an artifact of pre-existing conditions like “antisocial personality disorder,” thereby shifting blame from the addictive product to the flawed consumer. 
    • Discrediting effective solutions: The ecosystem publicly casts doubt on proven harm-prevention tools. The paper cites an industry-linked researcher who claimed that universal pre-commitment systems might have a “detrimental effect and may aggravate the problem.” Crucially, the study notes that a subsequent review of the evidence cited for this claim found “no support for this conclusion,” noting the studies had significant “methodological limitations.” This reveals a pattern of distorting weak evidence to undermine effective public health measures. 

    This distortion of science is coupled with political donations and the “revolving door”—where politicians and staff take industry jobs after leaving office—to block or delay meaningful reforms that could save lives.

    Conclusion: Shifting from Individual Blame to Systemic Accountability

    The evidence is clear: gambling harm is not a simple story of poor individual choices. It is the predictable and profitable result of a commercial system meticulously designed to addict users, shift blame, and protect its revenue streams at all costs. From manipulative product design to the distortion of science, the gambling ecosystem functions as a commercial determinant of health, actively generating and sustaining harm. 

    This reframing moves the problem from one of personal responsibility to one of systemic accountability. Seeing the deliberate system that drives these harms, what does real responsibility—from our governments, communities, and the industry itself—truly look like?

    Are you looking for more reputable data-backed information on sexual addiction? The Mitigation Aide Research Archive is an excellent source for executive summaries of research studies.

    Do you feel your sexual behavior, or that of someone you love, is out of control? Then you should consult with a professional.

    Have you found yourself in legal trouble due to your sexual behavior? Seek assistance before the court mandates it, with Sexual Addiction Treatment Services.

    #behavioralAddiction #commercialDeterminantsOfHealth #darkPatterns #gambling #gamblingAddiction #gamblingHarm #gamblingIndustry #gamblingPolicy #harmReduction #onlineGambling #preCommitmentLimits #predatoryDesign #problemGambling #publicHealth #responsibleGambling #selfExclusion #sludging #sportsBetting #stigmaAndShame #suicidePrevention
  6. 5 Hidden Ways the Gambling Industry Engineers Harm

    Originally Published on January 6th, 2026 at 01:54 pm

    Introduction: The Illusion of Choice

    For many, gambling is seen as a form of entertainment, a voluntary activity where personal responsibility is paramount. We’re told to gamble responsibly. But, if things go wrong, the blame is often placed on the individual’s lack of self-control. 

    But what if that entire narrative is a dangerous fiction?

    A new public health study reveals gambling harm is not an unfortunate side effect of a few people’s poor choices. Instead, it is the calculated outcome of a powerful and deliberate “gambling ecosystem” designed to maximize profit at a severe human cost.

    This system operates using tactics that public health experts call the “commercial determinants of health.” The same strategies used by the tobacco and fossil fuel to drive profit by undermining public wellbeing. 

    This post will reveal five of the most impactful insights from the study, exposing the hidden truths of an industry that has mastered the art of engineering harm.

    1. The “Responsible Gambling” Slogan is Designed to Blame YOU

    The familiar phrase “gamble responsibly” is not a genuine public health message but a strategic discourse meticulously promoted by the industry. The primary function of this narrative is to shift the focus, and the blame, onto the individual consumer.

    By framing harm as a personal failing, it deflects attention. It deflects it from:

    • Predatory industry practices
    • Unsafe products
    • A system that profits from addiction

    This blame-shifting has severe consequences, creating a culture of shame that prevents people from seeking help and isolates them when they are most vulnerable. As the study’s authors note: 

    This emphasis on individual responsibility diverts attention from the practices of the industry. It generates stigma and shame for those harmed. It downplays serious harms caused by gambling. Worst of all: it contributes to the suicide toll. 

    This psychological framing is so damaging because it convinces individuals that their suffering is their own fault, making it harder to recognize the external forces at play and seek the support they need. 

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    2. The Gambling Industry’s Goal is For You to “Play to Extinction”

    Behind the glamorous advertising and messages of entertainment lies a stark and chilling internal objective. The study highlights a term used by gambling industry representatives to describe their core aim: “playing to extinction.” 

    This isn’t an exaggeration; it’s the industry’s own vocabulary for its business model:

    “…gambling industry representatives describe their aim is to maximise revenue per available customer (revpac), and encourage ‘playing to extinction’, the point at which a customer has exhausted all available funds.”

    The phrase has a chilling double meaning.

    It refers to the financial extinction of a customer’s funds, but in the context of gambling-related suicide, it acquires a much darker significance.

    The industry’s profit model depends on pushing customers into the exact states of financial ruin and profound despair that are known precursors to suicide. It is a business model that treats human crisis as a key performance indicator. Rather than a tragic crisis.

    3. Products are Engineered to Undermine Your Control

    Modern gambling products, especially digital ones, are not simple games of chance. They have been intentionally intensified with features like:

    • Increased speed
    • High complexity
    • “Frictionless” transactions

    All designed to encourage extended use and bypass a person’s executive function. 

    The industry also employs digital tactics like sludging. Deliberately designing interactions to make it difficult for customers to act in their own best interest. Such as withdrawing funds or closing an account. This tactic also manifests physically. For 15 years, the Australian industry has resisted modern, universal pre-commitment systems that allow users to set binding loss limits. Instead, it has relied on a form of physical sludging: “manual, paper-based self-exclusion” that requires a person to fill out separate forms for every single venue they wish to avoid. 

    Product design also deploys psychological tricks to encourage overspending.

    The study points out that a single ticket in the Australian “Powerball” lottery can be priced as high as AUD$46,249.65. This serves as a psychological anchor. While few would buy it, its existence makes spending smaller—yet still exorbitant—amounts like hundreds or thousands of dollars seem reasonable by comparison.

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    4. “Good Causes” are Used as a Smokescreen

    A common defense of the gambling industry is that it funds worthy causes, from sports teams to community charities. The research argues this is a calculated strategy to create an “‘alibi’ to legitimise gambling operations” and procure a “social license” to operate. 

    This linkage creates a “symbiotic, reflexive relationship” where community groups become financially captured. Reliant on gambling revenue, these beneficiaries become powerful allies in resisting reforms that could threaten their funding, even if those reforms would reduce harm. This insidious dependency creates a powerful barrier to reform. 

    As one researcher observed, the dynamic is inescapable: 

    … at first the lottery was primarily dependent on the good cause and then, gradually, the good cause became increasingly dependent on the lottery. 

    5. The Gambling Industry Distorts Science and Influences Policy

    Like the tobacco and fossil fuel industries before it, the gambling ecosystem actively works to control and distort the scientific evidence base to protect its interests. The study identifies two key tactics: 

    • Funding “safe” research: The industry funds and promotes research focused on the individual, such as the influential “pathways model.” This model frames gambling harm as an artifact of pre-existing conditions like “antisocial personality disorder,” thereby shifting blame from the addictive product to the flawed consumer. 
    • Discrediting effective solutions: The ecosystem publicly casts doubt on proven harm-prevention tools. The paper cites an industry-linked researcher who claimed that universal pre-commitment systems might have a “detrimental effect and may aggravate the problem.” Crucially, the study notes that a subsequent review of the evidence cited for this claim found “no support for this conclusion,” noting the studies had significant “methodological limitations.” This reveals a pattern of distorting weak evidence to undermine effective public health measures. 

    This distortion of science is coupled with political donations and the “revolving door”—where politicians and staff take industry jobs after leaving office—to block or delay meaningful reforms that could save lives.

    Conclusion: Shifting from Individual Blame to Systemic Accountability

    The evidence is clear: gambling harm is not a simple story of poor individual choices. It is the predictable and profitable result of a commercial system meticulously designed to addict users, shift blame, and protect its revenue streams at all costs. From manipulative product design to the distortion of science, the gambling ecosystem functions as a commercial determinant of health, actively generating and sustaining harm. 

    This reframing moves the problem from one of personal responsibility to one of systemic accountability. Seeing the deliberate system that drives these harms, what does real responsibility—from our governments, communities, and the industry itself—truly look like?

    Are you looking for more reputable data-backed information on sexual addiction? The Mitigation Aide Research Archive is an excellent source for executive summaries of research studies.

    Do you feel your sexual behavior, or that of someone you love, is out of control? Then you should consult with a professional.

    Have you found yourself in legal trouble due to your sexual behavior? Seek assistance before the court mandates it, with Sexual Addiction Treatment Services.

    #behavioralAddiction #commercialDeterminantsOfHealth #darkPatterns #gambling #gamblingAddiction #gamblingHarm #gamblingIndustry #gamblingPolicy #harmReduction #onlineGambling #preCommitmentLimits #predatoryDesign #problemGambling #publicHealth #responsibleGambling #selfExclusion #sludging #sportsBetting #stigmaAndShame #suicidePrevention
  7. Labor under fire for reportedly backing away from a total ban on gambling ads. After the Peta Murphy inquiry recommended a full ban, critics say a watered-down policy risks prioritising revenue over public health.
    Crossbenchers are warning that partial limits (e.g., social media age-limits) won’t stop children being exposed to gambling marketing.
    Advocates say it’s not enough — they want a full ad ban to protect vulnerable people.

    #auspol #GamblingIndustry #gambling #lobby

    theguardian.com/australia-news

  8. Time to ban gambling adds and lobby groups altogether among other measures to curb the social scourge it is.

    “Sportsbet has previously paid $110,000 for a platinum membership to Labor’s business forum, which provides it increased access to ministers including cabinet members. But it downgraded its membership to the $88,000 option last financial year, according to latest disclosures, which show it also donated $60,000 to the Liberals and $15,000 to the Nationals.”

    #GamblingIndustry #GamblingLobbyist #AusPol #gamblingreform #GamblingHarm
    Read more
    theguardian.com/australia-news?

  9. Today I was intending to avoid social media (otherwise I get nothing done), but this cannot be ignored. #AllegraSpenderMP and #MoniqueRyanMP have quit the Parliamentary #SportClub because #DavidPocockMP has been banned from the club;

    “What an absolute disgrace that former Wallaby, Senator David Pocock has been excluded … because he raised concerns about the club’s links to the gambling industry. The sports club should be about politicians’ love of sport, not their sad addiction to the gambling lobby.”
    #Gambling #Sport #FederalParliament
    #GamblingIndustry #Lobbyists #ConflictOfInterests #Corruption #AusPol

    Link at the 12:53EST mark for the entry on LIVE The Australian Institute

    theguardian.com/australia-news?

  10. The University of Sydney has financial ties to the world's largest poker machine manufacturer and a global sports betting giant—both of which have funded its research and academic programs. Experts are calling for greater scrutiny of these "disappointing" relationships with the gambling industry.

    #universityofsydney #gamblingindustry #pokermachines #sportsbetting #academicethics #researchfunding #accountability

    theguardian.com/australia-news

  11. The University of Sydney has financial ties to the world's largest poker machine manufacturer and a global sports betting giant—both of which have funded its research and academic programs. Experts are calling for greater scrutiny of these "disappointing" relationships with the gambling industry.

    #universityofsydney #gamblingindustry #pokermachines #sportsbetting #academicethics #researchfunding #accountability

    theguardian.com/australia-news

  12. The University of Sydney has financial ties to the world's largest poker machine manufacturer and a global sports betting giant—both of which have funded its research and academic programs. Experts are calling for greater scrutiny of these "disappointing" relationships with the gambling industry.

    #universityofsydney #gamblingindustry #pokermachines #sportsbetting #academicethics #researchfunding #accountability

    theguardian.com/australia-news

  13. The University of Sydney has financial ties to the world's largest poker machine manufacturer and a global sports betting giant—both of which have funded its research and academic programs. Experts are calling for greater scrutiny of these "disappointing" relationships with the gambling industry.

    #universityofsydney #gamblingindustry #pokermachines #sportsbetting #academicethics #researchfunding #accountability

    theguardian.com/australia-news

  14. The University of Sydney has financial ties to the world's largest poker machine manufacturer and a global sports betting giant—both of which have funded its research and academic programs. Experts are calling for greater scrutiny of these "disappointing" relationships with the gambling industry.

    #universityofsydney #gamblingindustry #pokermachines #sportsbetting #academicethics #researchfunding #accountability

    theguardian.com/australia-news

  15. Examples of LECC's failure to address serious matters abound.

    For instance, #LECC knew for at least a year that a group of very senior officers (including the then NSW Police Commissioner Mick Fuller and three of his Assistant Commissioners) co-owned a bunch of racehorse with business figures in the gambling and gaming industries, some of them under criminal investigation. The senior police figures had not disclosed this obvious conflict of interest as required (connections between police and the gambling and gaming industries having been specifically labelled high risk by the Woods Royal Commission). And yet LECC did nothing.

    Then, in 2022 after Commissioner Fuller had resigned and was about to be appointed as head of Racing NSW (peak horse racing body), investigation by #ABC journalists revealed these undisclosed links and LECC was forced to address them. However, LECC's initial response completely cleared Fuller and rubbished the ABC reporting. Months later, a subsequent LECC examination of its own earlier response resulted in a complete 180º-turn: a ban on such business arrangements and an exoneration of the #InvestigativeJournalism that had revealed them.

    #NSWPoliceCommissioner #NSWpolice #transparency #corruption #GamblingIndustry #HorseRacing #EndHorseRacing #WoodsRoyalCommission

  16. Another 🤯🤯🤯thread on the horrors of unfettered #capitalism including but not limited to #EffectiveAltruism #Healthcare #USUniversities and #collegeSports as a #GamblingIndustry opportunity from @pluralistic
    Honestly, if you're on #mastodon you're probably following already but horrifying doesn't even cover it . ..

    mamot.fr/@pluralistic/10938208