Friday, July 20, 2018

Adding Words Together

Looks like it’s pretty much official.  Music is the thing now for the Gematrinator.  Supertramp was coded into 9/11.  Which is interesting because the same day we get a murder story.

https://web.archive.org/save/http://gematrinator.com/blog/index.php/2018/07/19/woman-murders-mother-grandmother-shops/

So far I’ve seen this three times, where adding the crisis actors names in the story together is the way to go.  If I put time into it I’m pretty sure I’ll find more.

I have to admit that adding the characters names together makes  some kind of sense.  If there is no clear leader like a Charlie Manson and multiple names are involved some way, victim or killer, then if there were some kind of secret coding going on instead of singling one name out or doing gematria of each name on its own combining them for the script is appropriate.  And although I’m not just agreeing with that to set up the next point I’ll ask the obvious questions.

Now, if 9/11 was a hoax, considering that the historical record has settled on 2,977 and 19 hijackers, why isn’t there something about adding all those names together?

Even if one settles for just the list of 19 hijackers that’s roughly six times longer than our three characters in this story.  Although this mathematically isn’t too different than the four digit number that’s really only a three digit number, the problem isn’t the 6000+ four digit number that results.  It’s that it’s immediately shaved down to a three digit number, 1,054=154.  The odds of getting a significant match of an unadulterated four digit number is pretty close to zero.  Even finding a hijacker four digiter shaved to 600-700 is running at low odds.  That’s why we have two digit number words like KILL, MURDER and SACRIFICE in this story.

It would go a long way to making me shut up if you could actually make a match with a truly significant number.  Here’s a rough example of the math:

1,054/3 names x 2,996 names= 1,052,595ish.  Pardon my sarcasm, but I don’t seem to remember a lot of matches for numbers in the millions.

It’s just another way to generate more different numbers from the same raw data.  Like a person’s name is either first and last together, only, with or without middle name, initials and nicknames now for one more “hit” you’ve generated thousands of “misses” that can be conveniently ignored.  Actually, I wouldn’t be too terribly impressed with a millions match by now.  With all the other misses that are ignored the significance is cheapened.  If there was a single elision from day one, and no number alteration tricks I’d be impressed.  By now somebody with more time than these lazy attention seekers are willing to put in might try to come up with something to match all 2,996 names. I’m sure it would be a hoot.

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