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  • Uri: Hi Bill. My name is Uri. My question is about giving some chance to the chance.

  • The probability of winning a lottery is very, very small. Nevertheless is playing lottery

  • rational? Thanks.

  • Bill Nye: The lottery. Uri, Uri, Uri. I’ve got to tell you when I firstit doesn’t

  • sound like youre in the U.S.. I grew up in the U.S. and I lived in Seattle, Washington,

  • for a while. And Washington in the United States is a western state. It has old traditions

  • and the big thing is it’s not as populated as other states in the U.S. and there is a

  • lottery. And I used to think it was kind of charming. If people wanted to play the lottery,

  • okay, thatll be fun for them. The chances of winning are very, very smallextraordinarily

  • small. Almost everyone who ever plays, ever, loses. And I used to think it was benign or

  • not any big deal, but I have changed my mind about that over the last 30 years. The lottery

  • is mostly a tax on people who don’t know math. And the reason they don’t know math

  • is because people like me have failed to enlighten people on what it really means when it’s

  • one in 230 million. It means you will lose. That’s what it means. If you have a one

  • in 230 million chance of winning it means you will lose. And when I was doing standup

  • comedy I used to have a joke – a jokeabout having a revolver, a gun, where the bullets

  • are arranged in a circle.

  • I don’t know your ancestry, Uri, but you might be from one of the Eastern Bloc countries

  • in Europe, and we have an expression in the United StatesRussian roulette where there’s

  • one bullet in the gun and you spin it and then you hold it to your head and see whether

  • or not youll die. And that’s a one in six chance traditionally but in the lottery

  • it’s one in 230 million or 450 million. So imagine a gun with 449 million, 999 thousand,

  • 999 bullets in it and one empty chamber. You would not hold that to your head for two dollars

  • ever. And so I feel bad that the people who play the lottery are generally people

  • with lower education and lower incomes. These are statistical facts. So we are accidentally

  • taxing people who can least afford it. And it’s frustrating for me as a science educator.

  • So my advice to you is don’t play the lottery. Use your dollars for something else. And if

  • you do play the lottery, I understand you get some pleasure out of it, but keep in mind

  • you almost always lose. And wait, there’s more to it. It preys on this other aspect

  • of human nature where we embrace the successes and forget about the losses. This is how psychics

  • make their living, palm readers and so on. You remember when they accidentally said the

  • right thing and you forget when they said dozens of wrong things.

  • So people win. They bet a dollar and they win a five dollar lottery ticket, a five dollar

  • reward. They almost always reinvest that five dollars or the four dollars to buy more lottery

  • tickets. It seems like a cool idea and now in the United States there’s huge state

  • incomes based on lotteries. But in the biggest sense it is a tax on the people who can least

  • afford it. It’s frustrating. I’m frustrated. Thank you for asking that question, Uri.

Uri: Hi Bill. My name is Uri. My question is about giving some chance to the chance.

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