A Quote by Artie Lange

I have a bad gambling problem. You're not in show business for 12 years and dress like this without a bad gambling problem. — © Artie Lange
I have a bad gambling problem. You're not in show business for 12 years and dress like this without a bad gambling problem.
Gambling addicts usually lose their focus at work and problem military gambling poses a national security threat
Everyone has addictions and my problem is that I have 5,000 of them. If it's not drinking, it's gambling; if it's not gambling, it's eating anything from burgers, doughnuts to M&Ms. The only addiction I don't suffer from is chasing women.
I do not have a problem, I enjoy gambling, but I think people are trying to make it seem like I have a problem, because people really don't know.
The only business in the world bigger than gambling is religion...but gambling is not nearly so corrupt.
I don't see how you have the nerve to oppose this bill when you run the biggest gambling business in the world - gambling on the hereafter.
This was my first lesson about gambling: if you see somebody winning all the time, he isn't gambling, he's cheating. Later on in life, if I were continuously losing in any gambling situation, I would watch very closely.
At gambling, the deadly sin is to mistake bad play for bad luck.
While gambling addiction can be a social justice reason for some to ban gambling, the economic evidence suggests that the social and economic costs of gambling are $3 to the taxpayers for every $1 in benefits
I used to have a gambling problem.
Like other forms of gambling, wagering on the Internet isn't illegal because it's bad. It's bad because we've chosen to make it illegal.
I wanted to do an episode about Chuck having a gambling problem. I wanted to portray my addiction on the show. But I think it's a little edgy for Saturday night.
When I was in high school, I had a gambling problem.
The gambling known as business looks with austere disfavor upon the business known as gambling.
Somebody tell my fam I got a gambling problem.
Gambling is a bad deal for taxpayers
In our most Puritan of society, gambling-like other pleasures-is either taxed, restricted to certain hours, or forbidden altogether. Yet the impulse to gamble remains an eternal aspect of the irrationality of man. It finds outlets in business, war, politics, in the formal overtures of the gambling casinos, and in the less ceremonious exchanges among individuals of differing opinions.
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