Society Magazine
Literally that, notes on tonight's near-record Powerball jackpot prize drawing:
1) If you were one of 175,223,510 people (you can't imagine that many), standing, say, in the middle of them, and a mile up someone with a paper airplane was to gently push it out over that crowd, that's how likely it is you'd get the jackpot prize;
2) If we must have lotteries for millions--and apparently we must--someone needs to set one up where each winner wins, at most, 1 million dollars. It would spread the prize out over the region and state and nation and do far more good for far more people and it would be greatly less likely to mess people up with such large sums. Could you imagine if 600 people tonight each won $1 million, spread out equally over the entire country? It would do a nation of good, in not a world;
3) If no one wins tonight, it will get perilously close to 1 billion dollars for a jackpot prize Wednesday evening.
That's crazy.
4) If one person only wins this second-largest-ever jackpot prize, it will likely--very likely--screw them up.
That said, when it comes to lots of money, I defer to Mark Twain's quote:
"I am opposed to millionaires, but it would be dangerous to offer me the position."
And Dorothy Parker's:
“I don't know much about being a millionaire, but I'll bet I'd be darling at it.”
Good luck campers and have a great weekend.