Betting against hypocrisy’s fall
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The sudden and dramatic descent of William J. Bennett into the ranks
of us run-of-the-mill sinners last week was timed perfectly to our
monthly neighborhood poker game.
Since I have found Bennett’s best-selling literary preachments
extremely irritating, I was delighted at his fall from grace. So, it
seemed, in varying degrees, were the other players, even though two
are openly Republican and several others are suspect. But reaction to
hypocrisy, it appears, even crosses party lines.
In case you’ve been too involved in the search for weapons of mass
destruction to notice, Newsweek broke the story of Bennett’s
high-rolling in which he has dropped -- or recovered, depending on
whom you choose to believe -- some $8 million, give or take a few
thousand, in Las Vegas slot machines.
This would be significant for the simple exercise of will required
to spend that much time pulling the handle of slots. But it becomes
much more significant because Bennett made a good deal of the money
he poured into the slots by writing books telling us to shape up
morally and stop contributing to the creeping decadence that is
dragging down our society.
His defenders, most of whom entertained themselves for years by
castigating the personal excesses of Bill Clinton, would have us
believe that gambling is a perfectly legitimate pastime that
challenges the risk-taking penchant of good Americans and therefore
cannot be regarded as a black mark against Bennett. I thought about
that during beer breaks and bad hands in our poker game last Friday.
It’s true that gambling is deeply programmed in many of us. In the
midst of the Depression in junior high school, I was playing poker
for pennies with my friends. One of our main sources of income was to
draw the father of a household into the game, tell him the stakes
were higher than they really were, and then gang up on him and split
the loot later. I’m sure every father knew he was being had, but
found this an amusing way of getting us movie money.
In the military service, we played everything for money. When we
attended compulsory chapel at Pre-Flight School, we used to bet on
whether the next hymn would be an odd or even number.
High-stake hearts was more often than poker the game of choice in
the ready-room. So was bridge. We used to welcome visiting Pan-Am
pilots overseas because they had lots of money and thought they were
better bridge players than they were. I remember running into two of
our pilots on some remote island waiting for repairs on their plane.
They had been sitting morosely for a week in a tin Quonset playing
gin rummy, and one owed the other $140,000.
There were always two quite disparate elements involved. The first
was winning. The other was the exhilaration of the game. When winning
became all-encompassing, then gambling turned compulsive and,
finally, deeply troublesome. I finally had to meet that head-on in
Las Vegas, set myself a limit that wasn’t critical to our well-being,
and stick to it.
When I hear Bennett telling a Newsweek reporter that over this
10-year wallow in slots he broke even, it reminds me of what amateur
gamblers tell their wives when they drag into their Vegas hotel room
at 4 a.m. after an all-nighter in the casino. Bennett may need to
believe he broke even, but I don’t believe that for a minute.
Our neighborhood game is nickel-dime-quarter three raises. A
20-buck turn either way is a big evening. It is also the equivalent
of one bet at a blackjack table. But though it is impossible to bluff
in such a game, we fight like gangbusters to be on the right side of
that 20 bucks -- and resist suggestions to up the stakes.
So why is our gambling something Norman Rockwell might paint as
heart-warming Americana and Bennett is catching all this heat for
his?
The first difference is the most obvious: the size of the stakes.
The distance between 20 bucks and $8 million dramatizes the
difference between the common folk and the very rich, whose tax
break, in this instance, is coming back into the economy through a
slot machine.
The second is that seven guys sitting around a table over a beer
sweating out a $10 pot contrasted with a white-haired guy sitting
hours on end in solitude hunched over a slot machine.
But still, if he can afford to risk $8 million as comfortably as
our risking 20 bucks, where then is the sin? Not in the gambling,
surely, but in the hypocrisy.
None of the players in my poker game have had the arrogance to
tell other people how to lead moral lives. If you are going to write
books titled “The Book of Virtues,” “The Death of Outrage” and “The
Broken Hearth,” and appear all over TV talk shows critiquing debased
morals by exhuming our private lives, then yours had better, by God,
be squeaky clean.
To steal a page from a favorite Bennett source, Jesus once said:
“Judge not that you be not judged Why do you see the speck that is in
your brother’s eye, but do not notice the log that is in your own
eye?”
Bennett might better understand the log in his eye by checking out
a current art house movie called “Owning Mahony.” It’s about a banker
who almost destroys his life through compulsive gambling, while all
the while denying that he is addicted. It made me very uncomfortable
because I recognized some of the signs, and it could perform the same
service for Bennett unless his level of denial has become
impenetrable.
I suppose the next time Bennett is in town for one of his $50,000
speeches, we could invite him to a special session of our poker
group. We might even up the stakes, just for him, of course. I don’t
think he’d notice.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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