Arkansas Lottery Rolls Out Even More Instant Tickets

This week the Arkansas Lottery rolled out five new scratch-off tickets.

These instant tickets are in addition to the five that the Lottery unveiled last month.

The new tickets cost anywhere from $1 – $20 each.

The new tickets are:

  • 10Xtra ($1 with a top prize of $5,000)
  • 20Xtra ($2 with a top prize of $25,000)
  • 50Xtra ($5 with a top prize of $100,000)
  • 100Xtra ($10 with a top prize of $250,000)
  • 200Xtra ($20 with a top prize of $500,000)

As we have said before, scratch-off tickets are controversial, because they are tied to problem gambling and gambling addiction.

A 2015 study in Canada described them as “paper slot machines.” 

A 2018 study published in the Journal of Behavioral Addictions also found a link between how often a person played scratch-off tickets and the severity of a person’s gambling problem.

Expensive scratch-off tickets like the new $20 200Xtra ticket are especially controversial, because they encourage people to wager — and lose — large amounts of money at once.

These types of tickets prey on the poor and desperate.

They use large jackpots to entice people to play the lottery.

Players who buy scratch-off tickets will lose their money anywhere from 66% – 80% of the time.

Despite these facts, the Arkansas Lottery still relies very heavily on scratch-off tickets.

The vast majority of the money from the Arkansas Lottery’s scratch-off tickets pays for prizes for lottery players. Very little of the money funds scholarships.

To put it simply:

As long as the state-run lottery depends on scratch-off tickets and spends most of its money on prizes, it will never provide as much funding as possible for Arkansas’ college scholarships, and it will prey on Arkansans.

Planned Parenthood Launches Six-Figure Ad Campaign Against President Trump, GOP Senators

This week Planned Parenthood Action Fund reportedly launched a six-figure ad campaign against President Trump and two U.S. Senators from North Carolina and Maine.

All told, Planned Parenthood has promised to spend at least $45 million this year in an effort to unseat pro-life lawmakers and elect candidates who support abortion.

In Arkansas, Planned Parenthood’s political action committee is actively fundraising, and the organization has endorsed candidates for state legislature.

Here’s the good news:

Abortionists see the writing on the wall. Even they believe that it’s only a matter of time before the U.S. Supreme Court dismantles its 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling.

States like Arkansas are leading the fight to protect unborn children.

Pollsters have consistently found voters do not agree with Planned Parenthood’s radical pro-abortion policies.

We are successfully building a culture of life in Arkansas. But abortionists still plan to put up a fight in 2020.

Photo Credit: By jordanuhl7 [CC BY 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons