Well, that instantly questions your own motives
If casinos are cheaters and swindlers, then why did you enroll in a casino signature campaign yourself? Or when money talks, bullshit walks? Is hypocrisy the right word to be used here? But seriously, how do you resolve these issues internally? How do you live with that?
So you're telling me that all those strategies casinos use aren't ways to bait customers and the ability of changing your session's setup doesn't almost always give you a false sense of having an advantage in the game? When you join a gambling session, you do so with an "I'm going to lose everything today!" mindset? I'm being realistic here.
I'm a gambler myself. This is basically why dice gambling is so entertaining: you are able to set your game differently every time to "change your outcome" when, in the end, it's either playing low chances with small amounts for a large outcome (which takes longer) or playing high chances with higher amounts for smaller but multiple outcomes (which takes shorter) but always gets to the same result: you either win or you don't. At least that's why it gets entertaining for me.
We both know that casinos are there to
take your money. Realistically, it's likely that more people lose at the end of the day gambling but that doesn't take fun out of the equation. Without entertainment, gambling would've been grounded long time ago.
Following the same narrative I quoted from your reply, I shouldn't be talking about Bitcoin no more because most are deceived into thinking it's a constantly profitable investment or have absolutely no idea how to invest the right way, so in most cases it ends first in losses before they get to a profit.
If gamblers are always thinking casinos are places where you earn a lot of money or that different session setups give you an advantage, the reality is basically exactly the opposite yet a quick look over the Gambling discussion board gives you a very detailed view over how many have the "fallacy" mindset. Maybe saying it's a "collective deception" might've been more accurate than saying it's what casinos do.