@sappholives83 Everyone right now are imagining this guy yanked the kid out of the arms of their mum and threw them in the pit with an evil grin on his face. If the guy is really slow, as stated, then there’s many other ways this could have happened. Incl the guy thinking he was helping kid etc
@EkonomiPappa Fråga: Om man tar hem vinst på vägen upp, räknas det då som en tenbagger?
Ex: köper 10 aktier för 100/st, säljer 50 på 500 och resterande 50 på 1000. Total x på initial invest eg ”bara” x7,5. Eller kan jag fortf hävda en tenbagger?
@Jeremytimmons@Chris_D_Brewer If dealer doesn’t consciously vary where he cuts it can probably be as high as a 25% chance he cuts exactly the same twice in a row
@baloneyburner@matfrankland1@dklappin Yes. So A of one suit would be next to the K of another. The K67 would all be of one suit and the A of another suit -> A7o and K6s as OP says.
@TrintonGL@dklappin Yeah I don’t totally disagree. My comment was under assumption that all facts given were accurate. Anyways, more likely the deck was sorted both times and just the cut happened to be same.
@Seirra2Kilo@crankmyplumbus@minty_hawk plumbus is basically saying that ”bad for economy” is not an argument against increased cg tax. OP even mentions exactly that (with notes) later in the thread so let’s assume it’s true. Something that is true and relevant in context is hardly a non sequitur.
@davidalber94179@Seirra2Kilo@crankmyplumbus@minty_hawk Appreciate the effort.
The issue I have is that plumbus comment is basically just saying that ”bad for economy” is not an argument against increased cg tax. Which is true (according also to OP later, so let’s assume it is). Hence, not a non sequitur.
@AlecTorelli Not even half the deck is relevant so that number is way off. But that’s not even the issue here. The deck was sorted, not shuffled. And if dealer usually cuts somewhere in the middle of the deck that leaves at least a 10% chance that they cut it the exact same twice in a row.
@dklappin Deck was sorted instead of shuffled.
CO/Btn getting A7o/K6s checks out. K would follow A, as would 7/6. K6 would also be suited as claimed while A7 would not be.
If dealer is used to cutting the deck roughly in the middle it’s probably like a 10-25% chance he repeats same cut.
@matfrankland1@dklappin CO/Btn getting A7/K6s also checks out. K would follow A, as would 7/6. K6 would also be suited as claimed while A7 would not be.
That dealer cuts the deck exactly the same twice in a row is of course uncommon, but not crazy at all.