Every gematria narrative has four key ingredients.
1. Numbers
2. Person/People
3. Major Event
4. Script tying 1,2 and 3 together
The numbers are easily debunked by viable alternatives. Simple word substitution tricks I've detailed previously.
Persons involved and the major events are tied together by chronological proximity. Although it's not clear exactly how close they need to be. E.g. Glen Campbell's death weeks before the solar eclipse. Generally the person part of the narrative is within a day or two of death.
The event part gets tricky since the introduction of the predetermined event as a viable alternative. Nothing is ever foretold in advance, the event needs to be completed. The person has died. The lottery numbers are already drawn, the box score is in the books. Predictions are avoided. Even after mentioning numerology showed that McGregor might be destined to win the boxing match, the guru who showed that did note that DEFEATED and UNDEFEATED have the same reduction gematria. (Which was an escape hatch because his prediction is wrong* not the proper regard that shows his entire premise is bankrupt of any utility.)
I admit that the solar eclipse was a significant and rare event. I admit that pro sports are more significant than children's games. But there are alternatives to work with that the lamprey argument holds true. What exactly is the dividing line between what is significant and what can be ignored?
The annual Perseid meteor shower occurred around the time of the eclipse. Chronologically closer in proximity to Campbell's death than ty eclipse. The Little League World Series is being played out. If these are "Manchurian Candidates" being bred into performing for a scripted future then who's to say that there's no significance to these numbers? And even in the world of professional sports we are now treated to the utterly meaningless charade of preseason football where the actual games are not genuinely contested but a training tool for the games that actually mean something in the regular season.
I highly doubt you'll be able to cite an expert reference to Pythagoras or Francis Bacon having an opinion on eclipses versus meteor showers. (If you Google"Francis Bacon solar eclipse you do get a reference to a restaurant that serves a bacon cheeseburger with eclipse sauce.) It's even more unlikely they had thoughts on Little League baseball, preseason football or while we are at it, preseason little league baseball.
The numbers are always there. It's a fact. I've seen enough use of the prime numbers elision to verify it produces larger numbers that inevitably get shaved down into smaller two and three digit numbers. Somebody will always do something. Now that a preordained event also counts as an extra anniversary you can substitute whatever event you want. So if John Smith's death is supposed to be a freemason sacrifice for the eclipse you can validly change it to he died happily of old age a week before his daughter's birthday.
*. Mayweather TKO round 10. Slow start, but the non-rigged conclusion was never really in doubt. The other numerological defense for the outcome is quite amusing and worthy of its own post.
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