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The Public Poker Industry

Public Poker is indeed an industry that makes approximately billions of dollars annually. This involves more or less 400 card clubs in California, about a hundred in Nevada casinos, and in other states.

However, the public poker enterprise could deteriorate if its entire customers - the losers - fully analyzed the amount of bet they will lose with certainty to their opponents, of course, and to the card clubs or the house itself through time collections, or automatic rakes.

Once they fully understand their unavoidable loser's role, some of these players might just as well cease playing poker to save their money, time, and even grief. Yes, that's right - grief.

Additionally, other players might shift to private poker games to get rid of their automatic losses to cheaters, professionals, and the house. Others might shift to private poker games to get rid of their automatic losses to cheaters, professionals, and the house.

Others might go for other casino or gambling games to avoid losing. Or would they stop playing, or shift? Would the losers leave public poker regardless of learning the inevitable multiple aspects players must pay to the good players, cheaters, professionals, and the house?

All other legal gambling games have an honest and sound operating fix that mechanically produces specific percentages from all poker players.

However, professionals and rampant cheating do not exist for any kind of casino game (poker is an exception) because in other casino games, these players are unable to get money from others, and producing money from the casino is impossible over the long term.

Therefore, a 'professional player' does not really exist - except in blackjack (in some cases), and poker - because no one can ever stand himself by betting against odds that are advantageous to the house.

On the other hand, the public poker industry is established on a unique formation of the professional players who work by showcasing their amazing poker abilities, outsmarting opponents by cheating, or both, to continuously receive money from other public players.

Now, could the public poker industry remain if the losers comprehend their role of being advantageous to cheaters, professionals, and the house? Maybe they could, or maybe not at all.

It depends on the availability of the public players would relentlessly accept their standing as losers and suckers. If the losers ever started rejecting their role by not playing public poker anymore, the industry would deteriorate.

Indeed, the whole gambling industry would fail if customers ever became imbued with logical self-interest and started eliminating their role as losers.

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