|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
William Bennett: the secret high-stakes gambling life of a
former drug czar
By Kate Randall
9 May 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
William Bennett, secretary of education under Reagan and drug
czar in the first Bush administration, has engaged
in high-stakes gambling to the tune of as much as $8 million in
losses in recent years. This revelation was greeted with revulsionbut
not surpriseby anyone who has followed the moral preachings
of this reactionary zealot. It is a further exposure of the rank
hypocrisy of the group of extreme-right ideologues who have justified
the accumulation of unprecedented wealth through the assault on
the social conditions of working people and the poor in the United
States over the past two decades.
The gambling habits of Bennettwho has made his millions
peddling books such as The Book of Virtues and The Broken
Hearth: Reversing the Moral Collapse of the American Familywere
detailed in an article by Joshua Green in the Washington Monthly
Online this past weekend. Bennett has apparently been a high-roller
on the gambling scene since at least the early 1990s. Green reports
that Bennett would often visit casinos for two or three days at
a time, and enjoyed lines of credit of at least $200,000 at several
of them.
Bennett was no small-time, recreational gambler. The Washington
Monthly reports a source saying, Hell usually
call a host and let us know when hes coming. We can limo
him in. He prefers the high-limit room, where hes less likely
to be seen and where he can play the $500-a-pull slots. He usually
plays very late at night or early in the morningusually
between midnight and 6 a.m.
Although Bennett claims that Over ten years, Id
say Ive come out pretty close to even, documents obtained
by the Washington Monthly show Bennett wired more than
$1.4 million to cover his losses in one two-month period. On July
12, 2002, he reportedly lost $340,000 at Caesars Boardwalk
Regency in Atlantic City, and on April 5 and 6 of this year he
lost more than $500,000 at the Bellagio in Las Vegas.
After the story broke, Bennett defended his behavior, saying,
I adhere to the law. I dont play the milk money.
I dont put my family at risk, and I dont owe anyone
anything. All trueand revealingstatements.
Bennett is a multimillionaire. In addition to profits from
his moralizing books, he pulls in $50,000 an appearance to spew
out his reactionary drivel on moral virtues and traditional family
values to select audiences. The fact that $8 million in losses
has had no impact on his family budget shows just how privileged
and distant his lifestyle is from that of the majority of people
who frequent casinos. For Bennett to tap into the milk money
he would have to lose hundreds of millions of dollars.
The situation is different for the millions of lower-stakes
gamblers who lose money at US casinos every day. While only a
few decades ago gambling was restricted to Las Vegas and Atlantic
City, New Jersey, in recent years casinos have sprung up in many
metropolitan as well as rural areas across the country plagued
by economic decline. Politicians have embraced casinos to make
up for the fall in revenues resulting from shutdown industries
and cuts in taxes on the wealthy. In Michigan, for example, where
gambling was once a relatively rare activity, state residents
spent over $5 billion last year on legal forms of gambling.
While the casinos Bennett has frequented are surely happy to
profit from his losses, the gambling houses in general target
their business to the higher volume of lower-stakes customers.
Gambling is big business. In Detroit, huge tax breaks have been
granted to the three casinos that have set up business in the
city. These gambling houses mainly target their business to workers
and the poor in the city as well as working people from the surrounding
suburbs. While many come for entertainment, a large number come
with the unrealistic hope that they will make it big,
take home large winnings and solve their economic problems. A
far more frequent outcome is indebtedness and gambling addiction.
The Michigan Department of Community Health writes on its web
site: For those who become addicted, gambling leads to serious
family and financial strain. Approximately 5 percent of people
who gamble ultimately become addicted. In Michigan, that translates
to about 350,000 compulsive gamblers.
On January 26, 2000, 38-year-old Solomon Bell, an off-duty
cop from suburban Detroit, shot himself in the head after losing
between $15,000 and $20,000 at two Detroit casinos. But according
to William Bennett, such problem gamblersand sufferers of
other addictionsare morally weak and derelict and their
addictions have nothing to do with the economic conditions under
which they live.
Spending entire nights in the solitary activity of pulling
the arm of a slot machine or playing video pokerboth games
that involve no thought or skill and which the house is strongly
favored to winwould certainly be a symptom of gambling addiction
and undoubtedly deeper psychological problems. For Bennett, however,
the loss of millionsnot to mention a mere $20,000was
not grounds for contemplating suicide.
In The Broken Hearth, Bennett chastises some on
the American Left who say that the breakdown of the family
and Americas other social ills can be traced to economic
deprivation and social inequality, including a decline in job
prospects and real income, wage stagnation, and an unraveling
social safety net.
Bennett has made an industry out of moral proselytizing as
a crude cover for maintaining this social inequality, and defending
capitalist society and its class rule. This includes support for
reactionary domestic policiesincluding draconian sentencing
laws for drug offenders, prosecuting children as adults, legal
barriers to divorce and abortionas well as the promotion
of US imperialist aggression.
Bennett was one of the signatories of an October 1, 2001 open
letter in the Weekly Standard which called for retaliating
against Iraq for the September 11, 2001 suicide hijackings, regardless
of whether the Hussein regime was in any way responsible. The
letter read in part: Even if evidence does not link Iraq
directly to the attack, any strategy aiming at the eradication
of terrorism and its sponsors must include a determined effort
to remove Saddam Hussein from power.
Bennett was also in the audience of the Conservative Political
Action Conference, January 30-February 2 in Arlington, Virginia,
when right-wing columnist and television commentator Ann Coulter
advocated execution for John Walker Lindh, the so-called American
Taliban. We need to execute people like John Walker in order
to physically intimidate liberals, by making them realize that
they can be killed too, Coulter told the cheering gathering
of ultra-right Republicans.
He also devoted an entire volumeThe Death of Outrage:
Bill Clinton and the Assault on American Idealsdevoted
to moralizing against Bill Clinton in connection with the Monica
Lewinsky affair. According to Joshua Green, Bennett continued
to gamble throughout the campaign to drive Clinton from office.
In the wake the gambling revelations, Bennetts supporters
have attempted to defend him by saying that he never personally
condemned gambling, so he had not compromised his convictions.
While this may be technically true, Bennetts organization,
Empower America, opposes legalized gambling and includes problem
gambling as a so-called negative indicator of cultural health.
In the end, Bennett has been forced by all the publicity to
give it up. I have done too much gambling, he said,
and this is not an example I wish to set. Therefore, my
gambling days are over. The conservative Concerned Women
for America commented that it hoped Bennett would remain
firm in his resolve to eliminate gambling from his life and will
not hesitate to seek any help he may need in keeping his resolve.
The entire sordid affair is, in the end, not a moral issue
but illustrative of the hypocrisy of those like William Bennett
who are motivated in their personal and political lives not by
principles, but by a right-wing and reactionary political agenda
and an appetite for wealth and the luxuries that come with it.
With the profits gleaned from preaching to Americans about
their moral deficiencies, Bennett entertained himself by dropping
millions of dollars into slot machines and video poker. But he
asks that he be forgiven his transgressions, because, after all,
he didnt play the milk money.
See Also:
Suicide at Detroit
casinothe human cost of legalized gambling
[2 February 2000]
Casino gambling in
Detroitlow-wage jobs and illusions of striking it rich
[31 July 1999]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |