Wednesday, October 5, 2011

The strange 'nine' factor in politics

TIME NOW TO seriously consider the remaining Notorious Nine who remain ambitiously fixed on winning the Republican presidential nomination, deeply troubling the party establishment who wishes there were one or two others in the room. The Niners, not be confused with that NFL team out West, have resisted their critics' charges of foul play while eagerly seeking the blessing of the most bizarre wing of their party.

Get used to it. They are dedicated cultists, and their strength lies in the fact that cults share the same mystical thoughts, forever dividing good and evil. They meet regularly as a group under the light of television cameras, their only concession to modernity. They engage in secret handshakes and passwords (jobs-killing and tax-cutting), the latter to lure skeptics to their ritualistic realm.

As a homogeneous group, they are Brave New Worlders who have much in common with the products of Aldous Huxley's Central Hatchery and Conditioning Center, and he might be pleased to be vindicated in his literary alert that the world is a-changing in ways that we might not apprecicate.

There is still another dimension to their strange presence. It's the fact that they represent a numeral that has long fascinated mathematicians. There are not six nor two nor eight candidates, but nine. Pure magic, and quite fitting for cultists.

Having taken a 24-lecture on-line math course last year to help me balance my checkbook and figure out a department store's layered discounts, I learned all about the uniqueness of nine. According to the math-minded, if you multiply any number by nine, the sum's digits will always up to nine. No other numeral can make that claim! Example: 9 x 781 = 8829. So, 8+8+2+9 = 27. And 2+7 = 9)

But we were talking about the mystical Notorious Nine, weren't we? Well, yes. But I paid good money for the course and figured that someday the strange nine factor would be useful to politics. Thank God that Chris Christie didn't didn't screw everything up by making it 10. On the other hand, is it cruel to add that these nine cultists don't add up to much of anything?



.


4 comments:

David Hess said...

They might not add up to much, but they could form a baseball team. Not major league quality, mind you, but perhaps entertaining enough to be labeled the Bizarre Buffoons performing between innings with the big league mascots.

PJJinOregon said...

Without wanting to sound like a nerd, the number 3 has the same property. To wit:

3 * 25 = 75

7 + 5 = 12

1 + 3 = 3

Thanks for stimulating my latent (or aged ) delight in numbers.

Grumpy Abe said...

Thanks, PJ. I'm not that up on numbers. But try 3x444. Go figure.

PJJinOregon said...

Very good, Abe. Bad, bad, bad, PJJ. 'Turns out multiples of 3 reduce to either 3, 6, or 9. See what happens when I spend time following politics - I learn to jump to conclusions that sound good but aren't.