This is such bullshit! Is this really helping anything?! The way people keep bringing up Obama’s middle name as a negative is the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard! Why should a name define who a person is? Oh wait, it doesn’t! What about Obama have we seen thus far that appears to be “anti-Christ”? And how does ANY of that relate to lottery numbers? Of all things! Let’s ask The Church and religious leaders of the world and see what THEY think about the matter. If any opinion should matter in this whole subject, it should be the so-called “experts”. But correct me if I’m wrong!
What are the chances? They start at 1000-to-1; if you would have accepted a lottery result on the day of election (rather than the day after) or even the day before (which would also have been dramatic and portentous), they drop to 333-to-1. There were two pairs of picks each day, and any of them alone would have done, so let’s drop that to 88-to-1.
If you would have accepted a lottery result in another significant US state (say Washington), we can drop it to 44-to-1. So these are pretty low odds. Ironically enough, with 44 presidents, we’d expect one to have 666 drawn in the lottery in his home state near the date of his victory.
This is such bullshit! Is this really helping anything?! The way people keep bringing up Obama’s middle name as a negative is the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard! Why should a name define who a person is? Oh wait, it doesn’t! What about Obama have we seen thus far that appears to be “anti-Christ”? And how does ANY of that relate to lottery numbers? Of all things! Let’s ask The Church and religious leaders of the world and see what THEY think about the matter. If any opinion should matter in this whole subject, it should be the so-called “experts”. But correct me if I’m wrong!
What are the chances? They start at 1000-to-1; if you would have accepted a lottery result on the day of election (rather than the day after) or even the day before (which would also have been dramatic and portentous), they drop to 333-to-1. There were two pairs of picks each day, and any of them alone would have done, so let’s drop that to 88-to-1.
If you would have accepted a lottery result in another significant US state (say Washington), we can drop it to 44-to-1. So these are pretty low odds. Ironically enough, with 44 presidents, we’d expect one to have 666 drawn in the lottery in his home state near the date of his victory.