‘Heartbreak’ shift a daily reality for gambling facilities nationwide

By Grace Thornton - May 19, 2008 - 2

The dazzling lights of nine casinos flood miles of farmland in the Mississippi Delta, blasting across the region as if they had more to compete with than a few catfish ponds and cotton fields.

Nothing hinders the casinos’ glow in the flat expanse of Tunica County, Miss. For the poverty-stricken area, the lustrous resort complex is the moon that rises every night in the west, glimmering in the Mississippi River on one side and penetrating the shadows of pawnshops on the other.

The area’s financial and political tide has ebbed and flowed to the gaming industry’s dominion for nearly 20 years now. Many tout it as a good thing for the county and the state. Who even questions it anymore or for that matter, even notices?

Adam does. He does despite the fact that it barely noticed him that summer. A 19-year-old college student, Adam looked for a summer job in the employment-starved Delta and found it in the booming Tunica Resorts area — now the nation’s third-largest gambling region behind Las Vegas and Atlantic City, N.J.

“I thought $10 or $11 an hour was pretty good for a summer job,” he said. But all the money in Tunica couldn’t counter the horrors Adam experienced working for a casino.

His employers suited him up and assigned him to the “heartbreak” shift, running the shuttle bus back and forth to the parking lot from midnight ’til 8 a.m. each day.

“My first night, I picked a gentlemen up in the parking lot right when I first got there. I dropped him off at the door. He told me he drove an 18-wheeler for a living. At 5 a.m., he came out bawling his eyes out. In five hours, he had given them everything he had — he even gave them his house,” Adam said. “The casinos are prepared to take anything from you — they have ATMs, they’ll cash your paychecks, they’ll take your property.”

That was only the beginning. For weeks, no one came out happy from the bowels of the casino in the wee morning hours — “not unless they were drunk,” he said.

One man punched the side of Adam’s bus. Another plowed his truck into an embankment. And fights took place constantly.

“I saw a guy beating his wife in the parking lot one night and had to call the sheriff’s department,” Adam said. “All kinds of crazy stuff happened every night.”

But the worst was still to come.

One morning around 4:30, he was driving a larger casino bus down U.S. Highway 61, the main route into the area, when an 18-wheeler passed him. Seconds later, the truck slammed on its brakes in front of him.

Witnessing suicide

“When I eased up to go around him, I saw that there was a person laying on the white line by the truck — it was barely even a person,” Adam said. “He had walked out in front of the 18-wheeler. He could’ve just as easily walked out in front of my bus.”

The next day, as Adam was picking people up, a woman told him the man was one of her relatives. He had lost everything at the casino and while he was walking home, decided to end it all.

For weeks, Adam was shaken. He spent his time behind the wheel with the wheels turning in his mind, examining from every angle the business that provided his paycheck but garnered that of so many others.

“The casinos make a bunch of promises when they come in, that they’re going to build up schools and the community. But they are generating those funds off the backs of the people in the area,” Adam said. “They can’t pay the bills by giving out money, but every now and then, someone would win a little. They give a little bit out just to keep people thinking they can win.”

And even then, many times, the casinos get it back, he said.

Adam remembers one woman who won about $10 million that summer. The casino put her face on a billboard as a big winner and sent her home in a limo. She told reporters she planned to buy a house for her mother, who had never owned a home.

The casino offered the woman a nice place for herself, too — a high-roller suite on the premises and a limo ride to the casino whenever she wanted it.

“She never bought that house for her mom. In six months, she lost it all,” Adam said.

He was not really surprised. “My major was psychology and we studied once what happens when rats have to push a button for food. If they know that every time they push it they’ll get food, they only get what they need. If it happens every third time, they will push it ’til they learn the pattern; then they will only get what they need. But if the pattern is random and they don’t know when they will get something, they keep doing it and doing it and never stop.”

Same with humans, Adam said. In the casinos, walls without windows or clocks hold in gamblers who have no concept of time as hours and even days pass. They waste their lives and livelihood away, he explained.

“The casino says it’s the person’s fault if they don’t have enough willpower to just eat a nice, affordable dinner; spend a little at the slots; and stop, but they play to people’s weakness. It’s intrinsic in all of us.”

And a summer of watching it was more than plenty for Adam. That summer started a string of events that eventually led to a recommitment of his life to Christ and a call to the ministry. “I saw a lot and I learned a lot. But I would never go back and do that over. Too many things happen there — and too many people hurt as a result.”

EDITOR’S NOTE — Name has been changed.

This article is reprinted from the May 1, 2008 issue of The Alabama Baptist, the newspaper of the Alabama Baptist State Convention.

The Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission works to educate Americans about the growing crisis of gambling addiction and supports legislation that would help protect citizens from falling into this dangerous trap. To learn more about this important issue, additional resources are available here. If your church is interested in purchasing materials on gambling, please visit our online bookstore and erlc.com.

Further Learning

Learn more about: Family, Addictions, Gambling, Citizenship,

2 comments (post your own) feed

1 On May 20th, 2008, at 4:41pm, Mark wrote:

This is a very well-written story. So many people believe they will get something for nothing. That’s the principle upon which casino owners build their empires.

I think everyone should visit a casino at least once. You see the opulence and the gaudy surroundings. You realize that this could not have been built on credit...it’s the product of huge revenue streams generated because the house always wins.

2 On May 25th, 2008, at 8:00am, Pamela Drake wrote:

If someone knows Paula Dean and could get that article to her, it might help her rethink putting a restaurant in the casino.

Post a Comment




Notify me of follow-up comments?

Before You Submit Your Comment (below), Read This:

Thank you for your interest in the ministry of the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission (SBC).

Comments are moderated to preserve the family-oriented nature of this website and in an attempt to avoid comment spam. We welcome opposing viewpoints, and we will not turn comments away as long as your views are presented with respect to everyone.

Your comments will not appear immediately and are subject to editing or deletion. We will make every attempt to check new comments in a timely manner, though there will likely be delays on the weekends and around holidays.

Please follow the these guidelines to insure your comments will be posted:

  1. Use a real name, at least a real first name. We find folks are less-rude online when not hiding behind a screen-name.
  2. Name-calling and vulgar-language will not be tolerated. Zero-tolerance is our policy. We will not spend time editing profanity. If it contains foul language, your post will be deleted. Oh, and we decide what is and what is not vulgar.
  3. Comments must be on topic. General comments (compliments, complaints, and otherwise) are best delivered here or expressed on your own personal Web site.
  4. And please, do not type in ALL CAPS. It looks like you're screaming at people.

Additionally, within Baptist polity, please recognize that many issues and decisions are addressed at a local church level. SBC denominational (national) offices have no control and desire no control over the activities of a local church. This entity is not responsible for overseeing and insuring the ethical behavior of Southern Baptist pastors or church members. If your concern involves a legal civil or criminal matter, we suggest you contact the proper local officials.

Issues involving pastoral staff or other church members, local Baptist associations or state Baptist conventions are local issues. Therefore the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission cannot and should not address such issues. While we regret we are unable to assist you, we encourage you to seek a biblical resolution of the issue at the local church level. If your question or submission pertains to a matter covered in this text, it is likely we will not acknowledge your submission.

Other than that, we welcome you and hope to see thoughtful discussions at ERLC.com