A fundamental principle of gematria sports betting scams, gematria crypto investment scams, gematria end of the world tomorrow buy my healing crystal scams, and all non gematria scams centered on a story contradicting science remains:
If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. Even more accurately, if it’s gematria related it sounds too good to be true because it’s completely hogwash.
Billions of dollars are wagered on the Super Bowl every year. A lot of that is small potatoes wagers, as much for entertainment as serious attempts to win a bunch of money. In one sense, gematria is now used correctly these days, acknowledging that there is a narrative for both teams. Rewind to 5-10 years ago the marketing included a lot of long shots that didn’t pan out. Which makes the claimant look bad and doesn’t help future marketing. Sticking to the games just around the corner makes a lot of sense. The prime example of this is Hubbard’s latest video - telling his troll haters to “pipe down” and claiming he’s essentially had a perfect record picking Super Bowl winners. The only blemish claimed is that although the Bengals lost the game, the wager that was encouraged was to pick the Bengals plus the points.
Even when I’m wrong I’m right.
And quite simply he’s stuck with lying about his track record which is nowhere near perfect. He’s not doing anything different than every scammer that pops up every Super Bowl. I’m only right 30% of the time in the past, I must be due this year! That’s a really bad marketing plan. He’s definitely active with his marketing and volume of content and reliance on not researching his past has held him up every year?
So what happens different with a scientific novelty that sounds too good to be true and someone sticks to it? You get the case of someone like Nakamura. As detailed in the linked materials, the blue LED was elusive. The science behind it was not a fairy tale. Light appears to be colored because it hasn’t different wavelengths. So in theory it should be possible. But finding the exact right materials to use, the exact manufacturing process with the right conditions, eventually Nakamura’s perseverance was rewarded with success.
And along the way, thanks to the anti science movement, propelled in part by grift magnetism, he got a lot of grief along the way. The end result is a boon to society’s addiction to convenience and need for immediate gratification. There was enormous pressure for immediate financially positive results. Science often does not work well in that atmosphere. It requires building on what preceded it. The average person is not going to settle down long enough to understand the way electrons jump around in different materials. Not when they can put down a couple of bucks on the Super Bowl and 50% of the time get an immediate result. Especially with a marketing plan that includes their lives are being rigged against them by nonexistent evil powers determined to make them miserable.
Nobody has made any improvements to sports betting gematria. There’s no future in store for finding a previous genius with a good idea that can lead up to a better performing version in the future. A system designed to show that both teams have a narrative to win? We already know that! What’s the point? Well, the point is there are far more people addicted to today than worried about tomorrow. And being addicted to your own fortunes today instead of what’s going on with others is at times necessary.
Bad news is immediate these days. As soon as the bombs land there’s a news story (at least within hours) of what happened. What’s going on with our political leaders fills the mainstream media web pages, including live updates from tue courtroom. The Nakamura’s of the world just keep chugging away, quietly working away unnoticed in their attempts to make the world a better place. And those that lose money on the Super Bowl because of false claims about predictive power of con men will get the same benefits of improved efficiency and therefore the associated lower cost as those who truly appreciate the effort it took.
So during the game, get your brewskis ready. Order that Domino’s pizza. Those a super convenient. Pay attention to the mega clues (Zach’s new phrase for the more important gematria narratives that will still be reported on after the game is over) and do some gematria on blue LEDs. They’ll probably kill you before the game is over.
No comments:
Post a Comment