DH tilts the sh t out of me.
Haneyh's Review of Conquering Risk
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RickySteveRestricted User
- 01-31-06
- 3415
#36Comment -
Dark HorseSBR Posting Legend
- 12-14-05
- 13764
#37lmaoComment -
That Foreign GuySBR Sharp
- 07-18-10
- 432
#38
Did you massively rush them or otherwise try and trick them in to saying "Two!" without thinking?
I feel proud I am in the top 10% of maths! Well at least until you ask me to do multiplication :SComment -
mathdotcomSBR Posting Legend
- 03-24-08
- 11689
#40Why the hell is Wall Street even in this book?
I've always wondered why you bother with these things (writing a book, lecturing, moderating, playing video games). I can see how moderating complements your gambling, but otherwise these seem like awful distractions if your gambling salary is as high as it should be to justify writing a book. It takes me at least an hour a day just to get the bets in, let alone decide what to bet.Comment -
Justin7SBR Hall of Famer
- 07-31-06
- 8577
#41I've always wondered why you bother with these things (writing a book, lecturing, moderating, playing video games). I can see how moderating complements your gambling, but otherwise these seem like awful distractions if your gambling salary is as high as it should be to justify writing a book. It takes me at least an hour a day just to get the bets in, let alone decide what to bet.Comment -
mathdotcomSBR Posting Legend
- 03-24-08
- 11689
#42What was your last lawsuite Justin?Comment -
wrongturnSBR MVP
- 06-06-06
- 2228
#43I completely disagree with the first part.
I didn't realize you saw it so black and white. Sportsbook and casinos, in my opinion, are neutral entities that offer people the opportunity to learn about proper decision making. Is not every single one of life's big decisions in essence a gamble? Look up the divorce rate. Check out NASA's history. Every exploration comes with build-in risk. Risk can't be conquered. It can only be managed. The elements to be conquered are fear and ignorance.
So I completely agree with the second part, about education.
Driving off a cliff doesn't make a car toxic. Why not learn to drive the thing first? If people wish not to learn the lessons life places before them, that is their right and free choice. Even then, if suffering results, something will be learned; so something is gained. Life goes on, so even 'ruin' is not a permanent state. The only difference between choices in real life and in the world of gambling is that the latter offers no place to hide. In this realm people pay for every single mistake they make. Some may find that unacceptably ruthless, but others find it incredibly beautiful; perhaps even more so because it goes hand in hand with a quest to improve upon current (scientific) knowledge.Comment -
Justin7SBR Hall of Famer
- 07-31-06
- 8577
#44My last trial was a small auto-accident where the insurance wouldn't even offer to pay the person's bills. Basically told the person that was rear-ended to screw off. I had a small claims trial, and got her bills paid plus a couple $2000.
I have another one right now that's a bit more interesting. A 21-year old gets out of alcohol rehab, and goes to the bar to celebrate. My client's stopped near a railroad crossing waiting for a train, and he smashes into her at ab out 40 mph, and screws her up. Then he tries to drive away, but his car only goes about half a block. He blew about a 0.29 right afterward, so the bar is probably on the hook too.Comment -
BigDaddySBR Hall of Famer
- 02-01-06
- 8378
#45it sounds like a great book justin
thanks for sharingComment -
Justin7SBR Hall of Famer
- 07-31-06
- 8577
#47They sold out of the first shipment. They'll request another batch next week, so it won't be a long delay... but you probably won't get it before the bash.Comment -
PokerjoeSBR Wise Guy
- 04-17-09
- 704
#48I love sportsbooks. I can't imagine a winning player who doesn't. I wish them well. Sports books who don't want to book sports suck. But inasmuch as a sportsbook does book sports, bless them all.Comment -
PokerjoeSBR Wise Guy
- 04-17-09
- 704
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Dark HorseSBR Posting Legend
- 12-14-05
- 13764
#52I actually agree with Justin more in the sense that gambling, like smoking, much often than not, can ruin people's life because most people just don't know how to keep them in control, no matter how much they tried by learning, therapy, whatever. You can say a lot of things in life also come with risk, but these two are at much much higher level for ruining chances.Comment -
Justin7SBR Hall of Famer
- 07-31-06
- 8577
#53I'm familiar with the view. It's typically held by the anti-gambling crowd, and usually comes with the stereotype gambler who lost all. I'm just surprised to find any pro gamblers in agreement with this typecasting, a world full of victims wherein casinos are evil. About the last thing I expected. lol
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PokerjoeSBR Wise Guy
- 04-17-09
- 704
#54I'm with Dark Horse on this one. There's no such thing as NOT-gambling.
Everytime you don't buy a lottery ticket, you're betting a dollar that you wouldn't have won. It's a good bet, but it is a bet.
There's no getting around gambling in life; there is some getting around stupid gambling; try for that.Comment -
mathdotcomSBR Posting Legend
- 03-24-08
- 11689
#55My last trial was a small auto-accident where the insurance wouldn't even offer to pay the person's bills. Basically told the person that was rear-ended to screw off. I had a small claims trial, and got her bills paid plus a couple $2000.
I have another one right now that's a bit more interesting. A 21-year old gets out of alcohol rehab, and goes to the bar to celebrate. My client's stopped near a railroad crossing waiting for a train, and he smashes into her at ab out 40 mph, and screws her up. Then he tries to drive away, but his car only goes about half a block. He blew about a 0.29 right afterward, so the bar is probably on the hook too.Comment -
Justin7SBR Hall of Famer
- 07-31-06
- 8577
#56A bar as a legal duty to refuse to serve someone that is visibly intoxicated (in Indiana anyway). They can't profit at the expense of unknown drivers on the rode that a drunk will likely hit.Comment -
Dark HorseSBR Posting Legend
- 12-14-05
- 13764
#57Here's an appeal I lost, suing a casino that went after a compulsive gambler and ruined his life. The court held that even if a player puts himself on a self-exclude list, it's still ok for a Casino where he excluded himself to encourage him to come back.
http://caselaw.findlaw.com/in-court-...s/1229525.html
I was just referring to the pure idea of a casino, which is neutral in my opinion. The idea that people are so helpless that they can't keep themselves out of a casino is just something I have to laugh at. I have a friend who was in precisely that position. After knowing him for some time he confided in me and my wife that he had this problem. Apparently, he was used to the typecasting, because he expressed tremendous relief when we just laughed at his ordeal as something silly and not worth the guilt he carried. He was stunned. He was used to people judging him, thereby confirming his role as loser. He proceeded to give us his credit cards (to keep safe out of his reach), and that's how he broke his habit of many years. Just another angle. Not suggesting it works for everyone. I just don't believe in affirming the victim role, because it makes a man powerless. For the first time in many years my friend believed he did not have a serious problem. In that new belief he was already freed from a difficult past. The rest was easy. (he had lost hundreds of thousands of dollars to the one armed bandit).
People self-hypnotize all the time. If a person believes it will take a gradual process to break a hypnosis (habit), it will be so. If they believe they can snap out of the hypnosis in an instant, it will be so as well. I've seen both.Last edited by Dark Horse; 08-17-10, 06:14 PM.Comment -
mathdotcomSBR Posting Legend
- 03-24-08
- 11689
#58And it is always perfectly visible who is more or less drunk than others. Unless you have evidence that this guy was completely falling over when ordering his drinks, the bar is completely off the hook.Comment -
JohnGalt2341SBR Hall of Famer
- 12-31-09
- 9138
#61
Now, for those of us that pre-ordered Conquering Risk through SBR when can we expect it's delivery?Comment -
brumbiesSBR MVP
- 02-21-09
- 1489
#62Why can't you explain it here? I am sure I am not the only one who's curious.Comment -
Maverick22SBR Wise Guy
- 04-10-10
- 807
#63
half of its genes come from the mother. and Half from the father.
So i guess to be fully correct a child is only partially the mother's or father's, but noone says that right?
You just say "Hey, this is my kid".
That should be reason enough (why over think it?)...
And if its not reason enough...well read what he said. stop. read it again.stop.do some critical thinking. then read it again. and you could come up with a half assed deducation from what he said. I did. But if he is offering to tell you at the bash, then I may be wrong. LOL.Comment -
mathdotcomSBR Posting Legend
- 03-24-08
- 11689
#65
Would expect nothing less from a poster with that handleComment -
Dark HorseSBR Posting Legend
- 12-14-05
- 13764
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brettdSBR High Roller
- 01-25-10
- 229
#69Where the hell can I get this book from online? I pre-booked with Amazon 6 weeks ago and haven't heard a thing. Is there anywhere else online that is stocking this book? I don't have enough points to order it from the SBR pointstore, and I daresay that even if I had the points, they're probably out too.Comment
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