The question remains what do most people think is fair? 6 months, 1
year, 2 years? Keep in mind, the casino does have some accounting
costs and other stuff to deal with as long as it's on the books. How
about after 1 year, you don't get your winnings but just our original
bet back and after 2 years you loose it all?
Yes, there are people who say that the casino should pay no matter
what, but that is never going to happen.
-Dave
--- In vpFREE@yahoogroups.
>
> What casino do you work for or are you the Manager from the Strat
racebook?
>
> Geeez....
>
> May you find a multi million dollar winning lottery ticket the day
after it expires (:
>
>
> ----- Original Message ----
> From: brentevans73 <brentevans73@
> To: vpFREE@yahoogroups.
> Sent: Saturday, February 2, 2008 6:40:11 PM
> Subject: [vpFREE] Re: The Wizard of Odds: Las Vegas Casino Blacklist
>
> Coulda; shoulda; woulda revisited. The Wiz screwed up. Now, by using
> the threat of negative publicity on a well-liked site, he wants
> someone else to assume the blame for his lack of attentiveness. There
> was a token disclaimer when the Wizard suggested that he intended to
> move the discussion to another site. But he didn't, did he? What he
> did do was to use the popularity of his home website in an attempt to
> bludgeon the Stratosphere into paying.
>
> Nothing against the Wizard of Odds, but he's wrong. By his reasoning,
> when I miss a vp hold I should inform management and demand that they
> pay me for the cards that I would have picked had I been alert. What
> about a craps game when I have the premonition that a seven will roll
> next and wipe out my place bets, but I let the bets up anyway because
> I'm distracted? Should the dealer negate my loss by acknowledging my
> first intent when I mention it four days later?
>
> There is a time limit placed on almost all wagers and contests. State
> lotteries come to mind. Whether the time restriction is for 60 days,
> 60 years, or 60 hours is immaterial. Rules were established by the
> casino. Rules were broken by the bettor. Why is the casino the bad
> guy for following the rules?
>
> I believe that the only negative public they will engender will be
> among folks who don't pay attention to their bets and want casino
> rules to apply to everyone, save them.
>
>
>
>
>
>
____________
> Be a better friend, newshound, and
> know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile. Try it now.
http://mobile.
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch format to Traditional
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe
__,_._,___