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…the reality is that, eventually, someone (or some people) will win, and while the odds are dramatically against that reality being me, I see zero harm in throwing down a ten-spot on five lines--
originally posted by: intrptr
a reply to: SlapMonkey
because you see the enormity of the potential if you do win, right? Because the pot has grown so large, because the media is saying look, play, win… right?
IMO, they plan this ahead of time, nobody winning for extended periods mean that money is invested in the mean time. The larger the pot gets the more people 'play' (gamble), and finally, the people that really win are the Lotto, the government (tax) and the rip off artists that steal it all back, (if they don't in fact pay out to their cronies in the first place).
Finally, name a lottery winner that didn't self destruct. You really want that?
originally posted by: intrptr
a reply to: SlapMonkey
Give your lotto money to a homeless person, the next one to cross your path.
The return is far greater.
There are far better things in life to be concerned with than how others spend their own income.
but I especially prefer to give to local orgs who specialize in getting the homeless off the streets and providing what my paltry ability to give couldn't in and of itself.
originally posted by: AugustusMasonicus
a reply to: boncho
They only spent $5 million in the example you gave, I personally would not call that buying it out, more like playing the odds, same as all of us do. They just happen to do it with more money.
State lottery officials say that the group bought tickets for 5 million of a possible 7 million combinations, at $1 each, in a lottery with a $27 million jackpot. Only a lack of time prevented the group from buying tickets for the remaining 2 million combinations.
The prize was above the number of possible combinations, in that respect its identical.
originally posted by: AugustusMasonicus
a reply to: boncho
The circumstances are not at all similar to the Powerball scenario.