That 33 again
It’s not a coincidence that the constitutional get out jail card free is this holiest of numbers.
Section 33 was not conjured up by a Québec separatist, either. It was mostly the invention of Alberta PC cabinet minister Merv Leitch. He suggested it to Alberta Premier Peter Lougheed, who in turn suggested it to Pierre Trudeau, Jean Chretien, Roy McMurtry and Roy Romanov.
Column: notwithstanding this, notwithstanding that http://warrenkinsella.com/2018/09/column-notwithstanding-this-notwithstanding-that/
got a smoke
In unrelated news, a teenager was just elected to municipal council in the largest suburb of Victoria, BC:
“Taylor, who ran in the 2017 Saanich byelection and became interested in politics after initiating a 33,000-name petition to ban cages used for egg-laying hens…”
Got a link?
So how do we account for the following within the confines of a purely materialistic/mechanistic outlook? I don’t think we can. The 33 coincidence is preposterous. Same team, same injury, & Theismann is present.
Headline:
Alex Smith suffers nasty ankle injury exactly 33 years after Theismann’s career-ending injury
Quote:
Smith’s injury comes on the EXACT same date, November 18, that Theismann suffered his brutal leg injury 33 years ago.
Link:
https://www.nbcsports.com/washington/redskins/alex-smith-suffers-nasty-ankle-injury-exactly-33-years-after-theismanns-career-ending
Quote:
The injury occurred 33 years to the day that former Redskins quarterback Joe Theismann suffered a career-ending injury when he broke the same two bones in his right leg against the New York Giants. Theismann, who was in attendance at Sunday’s game, said he texted his support to Smith.
Link:
http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/25312926/redskins-qb-alex-smith-breaks-two-bones-leg-texans
Steal a credit card, then use it to buy a winning lottery ticket, then get caught, then all the “winnings” go right back to the lottery corporation.
“A 33-year-old woman hit it big in the lottery, but ended up on the losing end when the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary charged her with theft of a credit card used to purchase the winning ticket.
Police said the woman did not receive the money — in fact, an eyewitness to the arrest says she never made it close to the lottery office before four police cars surrounded the vehicle she was in.
There have been plenty of suggestions on social media that the winnings should go to the man who was allegedly defrauded.
However, Atlantic Lottery says it’s impossible for someone to reap the rewards of somebody else’s illegal exploits.”
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/newfoundland-labrador/stolen-credit-cards-winning-lottery-ticket-1.5001728
Good call likely another phony story.