Hello old friends. It’s been awhile. But there’s something that needs to be added to the Internet to counter the...what to call them...untruths...posted about the Kentucky Derby.
Let’s put your math hats on and learn something about the power of exponential growth. Don’t worry. I’ve got pictures and some of the basic concepts aren’t too difficult, so even non-math needs can grasp it.
The basis for this is the ridiculous (as they always are) claim that Hubbard picked the winner of the Kentucky Derby. Well considering he picked four horses to win that’s already a foul. Your system works or it doesn’t. You either picked one horse before the race and only one horse or you’re admitting that there’s a “Jesuit” controlled narrative for any of them. The same way that during the 98th NFL season every single team had a 98=“The Chosen One” clue.
Hubbard is what is called a “tout” in the sports betting world. Most touts simply don’t show any evidence of their wild claims. Hubbard simply makes less than honest predictions like picking Tom Brady to win the Super Bowl with the league’s best team. In combination of being dead wrong a lot and simply lying his ass off about it. So recently a video had Hubbard claim (more like whine) that “even though you’re right a thousand times people just focus on the twenty times you’re wrong”. Well that’s 50 wins per loss, so you should be comfortable with only needing, say, 20 wins in a row. That would prove to the world what you claim is true.
You start with $50. You double your money with each win and “let it ride”. After 20 wins in a row you’ve just won $52 million. And you only put at risk $50 of your own money to get the ball rolling.
Yet the story is that he’s constantly asking for donations and complaining that this secret knowledge needs to get in the hands of more people. When all he needs to do is win the money himself and just give it away to those he chooses to.
Here’s a fun side note. If you start with one penny and double your money for 40 wins, you’ve won **11 trillion dollars**. Risking one penny of your own seed money to win less than Hubbard’s 50 to 1 ratio. Don’t take my word for it, find a friend who understands spreadsheets and reproduce mine in the photo. An accountant is a good start. A real accountant, not Hubbard who hasn’t gotten the grasp of simple concepts in life like a prediction comes before the event is over.
And one more thing about that previous comment. Apparently the Patreon discussion was hot and heavy about Medina Spirit. Yet in the video after the race Hubbard still didn’t know how Medina was pronounced. A pretty good clue that his work was focused on the written words instead of any actual pre-race research. One would think after the stink of failure on March Madness would have put a little more effort in. Because sure enough, the numbers magically aligned for the team that almost had an undefeated season and Gonzaga lost.
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