Ohio’s Lottery for Vaccinated People Is Pure Bribery — and It’s Brilliant

Protection against illness and death should be enough to convince people to roll up their sleeves. But since it isn’t, let’s bring on the gimmicks.

Sarah Stankorb
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Credit: Yulia Reznikov/Getty Images

“You can’t win if you don’t play!”

“Odds are, you’ll have fun!”

These are slogans I knew growing up, along with a 7:30 pm prohibition on any child-made sound as the Ohio Pick-3 aired on TV. My dad would strategize, consult tattered books listing previous winning numbers, carefully choose his number combination, and lay out a dollar or two he’d almost always lose. But he won enough to keep him interested, betting his luck might change.

There’s a certain brilliance in Ohio Governor Mike DeWine’s “Vax-a-Million” announcement. Over the next five weeks, each week a $1 million dollar winner will be selected from Ohio’s voter registration database. To be eligible, a person must be 18 or older, live in Ohio, and be vaccinated against Covid-19 before the drawing. A scholarship drawing is opening up too for kids 12 to 17 years old. Each week, one vaccinated student who registers will win a four-year scholarship that covers tuition, room, board, and books.

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