Numbuk wrote:
Rynar wrote:
There is no such thing as an investment that has no risk.
This. My conservative Mormon brethren really, really, REALLY hate it when I point out the fact that stock trading/investing is a form of gambling (something they are not allowed to do). They argue it, but the simple fact of the matter is you are putting up your own money with the hopes of a bigger return that is not 100% guaranteed. I'd call that the definition of gambling.
As I understand it, the reason that gambling is proscribed by Mormons is that in the Mormon doctrine, gambling is based on the morally wrong philosophy of getting something for nothing, of taking money without giving fair value in exchange.
Gambling involves creating a risk of loss where none would exist otherwise. Gambling (games of chance) is a zero-sum game it only transfers wealth from the loser to the winner. Investment, involves the transfer, in part, of the risks inherent to business, whether it is farming or telecom. Investments involve the transfer of necessary, existing risk from one party to another. Investment in a company foments the growth of that company as well as the over-all economy.
Even more simply, ownership of a company (the stock market) is not proscribed in the Mormon doctrine AFAIK.
Tossing money at the stock market (or the commodities market or the FOREX) without any knowledge of what you are investing in is akin to gambling, but even then there is a marked difference between this type of "investment" and a game of chance - There is no "something for nothing" and value is still created.
To augment what DE stated, wagering on a flip of a coin is gambling, while even poker is considered a game of skill.
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