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WSWS : News
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Suicide at Detroit casinothe human cost of legalized
gambling
By Larry Roberts
2 February 2000
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Last Wednesday afternoon, January 26, a gambler committed suicide
after losing thousands of dollars in the high-roller VIP section
of the newly opened MotorCity Casino in Detroit.
Solomon Bell, 38, an off-duty police officer from suburban
Detroit, lost between $15,000 and $20,000 in wagers that day,
first at the MGM Grand Detroit Casino, and later at MotorCity
Casino. After losing $3,500 at the blackjack table, at $500 a
hand, Bell pulled out his service revolver and shot himself in
the head.
Bell's suicide came as a shock to many Detroiters, who have
been told that the establishment of casinos would be a boom for
the city, creating jobs and an economic revitalization. The MGM
Grand Detroit Casino opened in April 1999 and the MotorCity Casino
opened this past December. Billions of dollars have been poured
into the casinos, including millions from the city to acquire
land and infrastructure to house the gambling businesses, even
as hospitals for the poor are closed because the city does not
have a few million dollars.
However, for those who have followed the casino industry and
its tremendous growth, last Wednesday's events did not come as
a surprise. "We expect people to commit suicide," said
Sheilah Clay, agency director for a program that runs a hotline
for gambling addicts. "But to do it in the casino, that's
shocking."
Clay reported that 5 to 7 percent of casino patrons become
addicted, and those addicts have a high rate of suicide. Within
the nine months casinos have existed in Detroit her office has
received calls from 12 people threatening to kill themselves.
"In those cases," reported Clay, "we've kept them
on the line until we could get someone physically to the place
they are."
Clay's experiences are echoed in national reports investigating
the gambling industry. A report published by the National Gambling
Impact Commission reported that 5 million Americans are pathological
or problem gamblers, and another 15 million are at risk. A second
report published by the National Research Council, part of the
National Academy of Science, reported that "pathological
gamblers are far more likely to commit crimes, run up large debts,
damage relationships and kill themselves."
In both Atlantic City and Las Vegas, the largest casino resorts
in the US, suicides have become commonplace, a byproduct of the
industry itself. In Atlantic City, three people committed suicide
within an eight-day period in August after suffering massive losses
at the betting tables.
News reports stated that following Solomon Bell's suicide the
MotorCity Casino continued its operations on three of four floors.
Only the floor where the shooting occurred was emptied, provoked
primarily by the panic of witnesses to the suicide. However five
hours after the suicide, even before the blood on the carpet had
dried, high-stakes betting was continued.
In their short period of operation, the Detroit casinos have
proved extremely lucrative. MGM Grand Detroit has pulled in more
than $1 million a day in profits, more than its parent Las Vegas
resort, according to 1999 fourth-quarter earnings reports.
Solomon Bell was the type of person the casinos seek to attract.
As a suburban policeman he made $75,000 last year in salary and
overtime, owned several cars, and was buying a $134,000 home.
The majority of casino patrons are Detroiters with far less meansgenerally
working people, many poor, hoping to hit it big and move out of
poverty.
The odds are always stacked against people who enter the gaming
halls. Winning margins are set by the casino operators, with the
aid of computers, and are always in favor of the owners. The only
winners have been those who invested in the casinos, often with
very little money, and have walked away with millions at the expense
of people like Solomon Bell.
What has spurred the growth of the gaming industry in the US?
The drive by big business to cut costs led to the wide-scale destruction
of jobs in the late 1970s and early 80s, unopposed by the unions.
Autoworkers, steelworkers, rubber workers and airline workers,
to name just a few, were hit with massive job losses, leading
to levels of poverty unseen since the 1930s. In Detroit, as the
auto industry cut jobs and spun off its auto parts manufacturing,
often to nonunion companies, the incomes and communities of workers
were devastated.
Significantly, the attempt to bring gambling into Detroit was
strongly opposed for close to 20 years. Beginning in 1976, casino
proponents tried four times to pass referendums to legalize casinos
in Detroit, defeated each time by large margins. At that time
the political establishment, including the present Detroit Mayor
Dennis Archer, a Democrat, and Michigan's Republican Governor
John Engler, opposed the construction of casinos.
In 1993 a fourth Detroit referendum on casinos was narrowly
defeated. By 1994 the views of the political elite had changed.
Casino proponents, with the support of the news media, claimed
the new Windsor, Ontario casino, across the river and directly
in view of downtown Detroit, was taking in money that Detroiters
could be using to rebuild the city.
The 1994 vote was also assisted by a new element seeking to
get in on the action: black businessmen and the clergy who were
promised they would personally benefit from the establishment
of gambling in Detroit. Millions of dollars were spent to sell
the casinos to the public as its savior. The 1994 referendum,
the fifth attempt in 18 years, finally passed, paving the way
for the construction of casinos.
Until the late 1980s gambling existed only in Atlantic City
and Las Vegas. Today, a person can make a legal wager in every
state except Utah, Hawaii and Tennessee. Thirty-one states, including
Michigan, have casino-style gambling, and thirty-seven states
and the District of Columbia operate state lotteries. An industry
that was once an exotic rarity has become a $600 billion industry,
and is growing.
Detroit was once proudly called the auto capital of the world,
but in the year 2000 there are only two remaining auto assembly
plants within the city limits. In their place, garish casinos
have sprouted up, surrounded by poverty and blight.
Gambling is at best an unhealthy industry that accentuates
the inequality in society, acting as a cash nexus, transforming
everyone and everything into a commodity. Culturally, the growth
of the gambling industry is yet another example of social decay,
a parasitic enterprise that appeals to the worst instincts: greed,
individualism and indifference.
See Also:
Australian Productivity
Commission finds that gambling is "beneficial"
[10 September 1999]
Casino gambling in
Detroitlow-wage jobs and illusions of striking it rich
[31 July 1999]
An exchange
on gambling and socialism
[19 December 1998]
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