Time to pretend that some previous visitations this week are looking for some sort of immediate relief to show why you easily get contradicting information with Gematria. I’ve waited long enough for more of the same or a better example, but this will do nicely. This is exactly the way it plays out both with fake pregame predictions and the more common reporting in hindsight. The same faulty logic is present in all narratives, regardless of if you are analyzing (which is rather generously called ‘decoding’ by the practitioners, more like throwing a bunch of random piles of feces against a wall until something sticks) a sports game or a school shooting or whatever. From Twitter:
Congratulations. You’ve found that the final score of the game, 13-3, is coded into the Patriots victory. So since it’s not more specific like, “PATRIOTS WIN SUPER BOWL 53” you’ve just proven gematria doesn’t work every other time the Patriots did not win by the exact score of 13-3. If the phrase meant anything to reality the Patriots would win every single game 13-3, or maybe the other values on the calculator. But you have the unfortunate happenstance of the New England dynasty being in the Super Bowl a lot. So why didn’t they beat the Eagles last year by 13-3?
To further muddy the waters:
There’s the same 13-3 score coded into the phrases indicating clearly who would win, and with a simple flipping of teams around in the sentence as soon as you find one number you like you can instantly produce the opposite meaning. With simple grammar. Despite claims the entire language is magically coded with gematria.
This is not that difficult a concept to grasp. The more effort somebody puts into spinning a tale into that this nonsense has any real meaning is a sure sign that they are covering up that they are duping someone into believing it for money, attention or both.
No comments:
Post a Comment