Final Warning to National Lottery

National Lottery Promises

There are two promises that the national lottery maintain:

  1. Raise money for charitable causes because it removes the burden from the government
  2. Change the lifestyle of the lucky winners for eveer by making them super rich

The National Lottery seems to be failing on both counts. Really needy causes, those desperate for a small amount of cash seem to be missing out on funding. This site has no evidence for this, will not offer any evidence for this, if its good enough for an aged megalomaniac ruling the USA – its good enough for this site.

The National Lottery is equally failing on its second count as this article is not being posted from a sun drenched white sandy beach with rolling surf and endless cocktails.

The Real Reason People Buy Tickets

This brings us nicely round to the reasons people buy lottery tickets. Hand on heart, if people are brave enough to own up to their motives it will not be to raise funds for needy causes. It will simply be because there is the promise of the multimillionaire lifestyle. The champagne, fast cars, big houses and luxury.

How Can You Not Win?

“You have to be in it to win it” the famous tag line of the National Lottery. If you have held a set of numbers since day 1 of the lottery, every single draw and a few Euromillions tickets on top would it be unreasonable to expect mire than a £10 win in that time?

Statistically this would be well within the norm with the odds being some 13,000,000,000:1 against however this ‘norm’ does not tie up with the National Lottery sales pitch.

Formal Notice To Quit

The sales message is failing to deliver on both of the points raised above from its inception to date. It is without regret that we serve formal notice on the National Lottery to Quit. In other words unless the National Lottery delivers a jackpot on either the main draw or the Euromillions draw before 31/03/2017, then no more tickets will be purchased by the author.

Perhaps the real winner is that by not buying tickets for the two weekly draws one can be £208/year better off. That is a staggering amount of money since the National Lottery started in 1994.