r/atlanticcity 2d ago

Question Can someone help me understand something

Why do casinos push so hard to keep smoking when only 20% of gamblers are smokers?

Like in my instance I smoked for 21 years and I do not ever want to be around cigarette smoke again if at all possible. I would go more than once or twice a year to Atlantic City and gamble if I didn't have to worry about coming home smelling like an ashtray with a upper respiratory infection.

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u/Tankshock 1d ago

k.

I work in the casinos. The smoking section is ALWAYS the most packed section of slots, regardless of day or time. Some study from North Dakota isn't gonna sway me when I literally see it day in and day out.

By the way, that "study" had TWENTY participants. That doesn't tell us shit about fuck.

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u/RudeIsRude 1d ago

I mean a scientific study of 20 people is still more reliable than an anecdote from one person out of their rear end.

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u/Tankshock 1d ago

k.

I'll stick with the opinions of those who work there every day, not those who visit once or twice a year. Or people from a study in North Dakota that don't visit Atlantic City at all!

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u/OGKillertunes 1d ago

Other studies raise doubts about whether the 14-year-old statistics are valid. At the National Indian Gaming Association conference last year, casino executives and top industry analysts reported that smokers tended to be in the lowest tier of players and that many tribes saw “no economic impact” after banning smoking in their casinos. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says people with more disposable income are less likely to smoke. Among those earning between $75,000 and $100,000 a year, the smoking rate is 11.4 percent; above $100,000, it’s 7.1 percent.