Several points, so I’ll try to be brief…
1. I think y'all have been dancing around the real issue. At the very least, this thread has become a discussion of “apples and oranges.” Is this a moral question? Yes. Is this a legal question? Yes, again. So, in this case, both apply… but, separately.
2. We have a serious age gap here… If you’re an adult reading this, you’ll recall a time when gambling was legal only in the Nevada desert. If you’re a Gen-Xer, you’re growing up (or very recently grew up) in a time where 48 states have since legalized some form of gambling. And let’s not even discuss internet, (or online, or off-shore) gambling.
3. Though many a state’s Constitutions have been amended to permit legalized gambling, it is usually a form of state-sanctioned, state-regulated “gaming,” such as the lottery, which, I might add, is legal for adults only, not minors. The reason why the vast majority of new casinos that have popped up, in recent years, on Indian Reservations or maritime vessels, have been to circumvent a nearby state’s Constitution. So, aside from these "legal" forms of gambling (gaming), it’s almost always otherwise considered illegal -- sometimes by General Statute, sometimes by the state’s Constitution. So, in my mind, if an adult Scouter were to be seen purchasing even so much as a single, lowly Lottery ticket, while wearing the Scout uniform, it would be no more acceptable than purchasing or consumption of alcohol or tobacco products, because... we adults must remember that, when we wear the uniform, we represent the youth of our organization.
4. Now, in order for casual gambling (that is, outside of the previously discussed state-sanctioned, state-regulated enterprises) to be considered "gambling," requires that a substantive wager can be won by some means of chance. Without those two things, it's just a game. Poker without a "real" wager ain't no different than Go Fish. Otherwise, we could not play Billiards because people bet large sums of money on 9-Ball, nor could we ride horses because people bet on the ponies all the time, nor could my retirement account be legal because the market is surely a game of chance. So, although I personally frown upon the use of playing cards on Scouting trips, particularly Summer Camp, a bunch of 14 year olds playing Poker for matchsticks is not, I repeat for all my formerly Baptist brethren, NOT, gambling. In fact, it’s no different than playing Monopoly with play money. Conversely, if I caught Scouts playing Poker for money, or making any sort of monetary wager for that matter, I’d have to put a stop to that.
On more thing, the jokes y'all are cracking?... hilarious.
