Should Gambling Advertising Be Banned Debate

broken image


  1. Gambling adverts on television, online, and particularly within football will be looked back on the same way we now consider tobacco advertising, a columnist has said. Speaking on Channel 5's Jeremy Vine programme, Guardian writer Owen Jones said he thought betting companies should not be allowed to sponsor football shirts.
  2. Yep, it pretty much was the same when cigarette advertising was banned – doom & gloom, the death of both sport & radio/tv, etc, etc. In fact the situations were very similar – radio, tv, advertising, & sports industries weren't sticking by the existing voluntary code, the government proposed a more restrictive code, radio/tv/sport claimed it would have 'serious consequences' for them.
  3. Start a New Debate. Challenge Period. Debating Period. Advertisement for gambling should be banned in sporting events 0% Say Yes 0% Say No.

Yeah im doing a debate on the same topic and side:P. He're is what i have so far: That advertising for gambling should be banned during sporting events. When parents take their kids to sporting events such as cricket and AFL, they expect them to enjoy the game for what it is: a simple game. Gambling adverts should be banned, an influential group of more than 50 MPs and peers has concluded in a report that calls for the biggest shake-up of Britain's gambling laws in more than a decade.

A bishop is calling for stricter controls on betting adverts amid fears children are being 'groomed' into gambling - with sponsorship deals such as Norwich City's in the firing line.

The Church of England General Synod will debate a motion later this month calling for the Government to rein in the spread of gambling advertising to protect children.

Nine of the 20 Premier League teams and 17 of 24 Championship teams have a gambling company as their main sponsor.

Should Gambling Advertising Be Banned Debate

That includes the Canaries, whose shirts are emblazoned with the logo of Sweden-based company, LeoVegas.

The motion was brought by the Bishop of St Albans Alan Smith who said legislation was needed to combat the quantity of gambling adverts.

You may also want to watch:

Should Gambling Advertising Be Banned Debate Moderators

But Dr Smith said action was also needed to stop football players having gambling logos on their strips and betting adverts on pitch-side hoarding.

When asked if he would like to see a ban on gambling adverts on football shirts, Dr Smith said: 'I think that would be a really good idea.

  1. 1Coronavirus figures suggest Norfolk tier drop hopes will be dashed
  2. 2Woman taken to hospital after being hit by bus in city centre
  3. 3'It's not worth the risk' - Shoppers react to rise in coronavirus cases
  1. 4Coronavirus vaccinations in Norfolk and Waveney GP surgeries to start
  2. 5People urged not to walk too close to cliff edges
  3. 6Aviva dividends set to take hit after another sell off
  4. 7Tributes to UEA academic who died in fire at house of 57 years
  5. 8Police attended reports of row hours before fatal house fire
  6. 9Tributes pour in for property entrepreneur and ambassador
  7. 10Lorry and car crash on A47

'My personal view is we need to get far, far more radical. You simply cannot live in this country without being confronted endlessly.

'I know families who will not let their children watch football matches on TV because they feel their children are being groomed into gambling.'

Dr Smith told reporters about a young boy who had branded the football shirt his parents gave him for Christmas not a 'proper one' because it did not have betting logo on it.

Dr Smith added: 'That was a real wake up call for me.

'A whole generation of young people have taken on a range of views and attitudes about the norm of gambling.

'We have changed the enjoyment of sport from sport in itself to something that's to do with money and betting.

Texas holdem poker download full version free. 'Our worry is we are as a nation sleepwalking into something by normalising and socialising a whole generation of people with no idea where it might go.'

A Gambling Commission audit from last year revealed the number of problem gamblers aged 11 to 16 rose to 55,000 over two years.

The General Synod debate will also consider a call for a mandatory levy on gambling firms to fund research, education, and treatment programmes for addicts.

Dr Smith is urging the Government to review the levels of gambling adverts children are subjected to and draw up new legislation focused on to reducing it.

But he also called on the gambling industry and FA to do more to limit the damage of gambling adverts to young people.

Against

That includes the Canaries, whose shirts are emblazoned with the logo of Sweden-based company, LeoVegas.

The motion was brought by the Bishop of St Albans Alan Smith who said legislation was needed to combat the quantity of gambling adverts.

You may also want to watch:

Should Gambling Advertising Be Banned Debate Moderators

But Dr Smith said action was also needed to stop football players having gambling logos on their strips and betting adverts on pitch-side hoarding.

When asked if he would like to see a ban on gambling adverts on football shirts, Dr Smith said: 'I think that would be a really good idea.

  1. 1Coronavirus figures suggest Norfolk tier drop hopes will be dashed
  2. 2Woman taken to hospital after being hit by bus in city centre
  3. 3'It's not worth the risk' - Shoppers react to rise in coronavirus cases
  1. 4Coronavirus vaccinations in Norfolk and Waveney GP surgeries to start
  2. 5People urged not to walk too close to cliff edges
  3. 6Aviva dividends set to take hit after another sell off
  4. 7Tributes to UEA academic who died in fire at house of 57 years
  5. 8Police attended reports of row hours before fatal house fire
  6. 9Tributes pour in for property entrepreneur and ambassador
  7. 10Lorry and car crash on A47

'My personal view is we need to get far, far more radical. You simply cannot live in this country without being confronted endlessly.

'I know families who will not let their children watch football matches on TV because they feel their children are being groomed into gambling.'

Dr Smith told reporters about a young boy who had branded the football shirt his parents gave him for Christmas not a 'proper one' because it did not have betting logo on it.

Dr Smith added: 'That was a real wake up call for me.

'A whole generation of young people have taken on a range of views and attitudes about the norm of gambling.

'We have changed the enjoyment of sport from sport in itself to something that's to do with money and betting.

Texas holdem poker download full version free. 'Our worry is we are as a nation sleepwalking into something by normalising and socialising a whole generation of people with no idea where it might go.'

A Gambling Commission audit from last year revealed the number of problem gamblers aged 11 to 16 rose to 55,000 over two years.

The General Synod debate will also consider a call for a mandatory levy on gambling firms to fund research, education, and treatment programmes for addicts.

Dr Smith is urging the Government to review the levels of gambling adverts children are subjected to and draw up new legislation focused on to reducing it.

But he also called on the gambling industry and FA to do more to limit the damage of gambling adverts to young people.

Dr Smith added: 'We need research data, we need proper treatment. The gambling industry should contribute towards that.

'The best thing would be for the gambling industry to self-regulate.

'The FA and others need to wake up very quickly to how damaging this is going to be.'

Should Gambling Advertising Be Banned Debate Arguments

The General Synod is the national assembly of the Church of England which has 478 voting members across three houses - the bishops, clergy and laity.

Should Gambling Advertising Be Banned Debate 2020

It will meet at Church House in Westminster, from February 20-23.





broken image