Wednesday, August 1, 2018

Another Fun Prime Number

Instead of “synchronicity” with a year’s old event with a tiny number, don’t you think it would be reasonable to expect that an almighty Matrix might want to use a number that just wants to identify one single event?  You should think that.  There’s sooooo many things that 112 might equal.  It could be SANDY HOOK=112.  Or maybe there’s a poem written, a SANDY POEM=112 that the Matrix took a fondness to and just wanted to document it.  But for something really superexcellent you need a much bigger number.  And they do love their prime numbers.  Because they’re oh so much smaller than the unabbreviated form.

If you want a fun number that has no chance of being used in its entirety in a gematria narrative I’ve got just the number.  But forgive me if I mistype.  It’s kind of long.

357686312646216567629137

If something important can be tied into that full number it will shut me up immediately.  Considering that the best offerings are only four digits long I’m pretty safe.  That number is a prime number.  So it’s placement on the list of primes is still way out of the territory that they use.  Why is this number significant?  It’s a left truncated prime number.  If you drop the 3 leading off the sequence then the part starting with the 5 is also prime.  Repeat.  That’s a prime starting with the 7 after the 3 and 5 take a hike.  All the way down to the 7 at the end they’re all primes.

From yesterday we’ve already established that math is important to gematria, or so they claim.  Fuzzy math though.  Like 22/7 = Pi.  So although the math of 113= the 30th prime number is correct the fact that TRUTH=30 has absolutely no impact on them since 113 is used to mean DISHONEST or BULLSHIT.  The 113 story was just repeated again two days ago.  Either intentionally because they just want to say something mean spirited or just don’t have a clue that the system doesn’t work.

Of course this means another failure on the astute researcher battleground front.  Too busy with the two digit numbers that can be found every day to even think that their precious prime numbers might hide a number that has a way cooler pedigree than the first two decimal places of Pi tacked onto a three.


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