[quote="Noah"]I'm sorry to hear about that. I'm also sorry to hear about your other family tragedies.
[quote="Nitro"]-when my twin brother died in a ski accident when we were 8
-when my father died in a bombing in Iraq
-when mystepdad died in the bombing of Twin Towers (damn you terrorists)
-when my best friend moved away and never contacted me again, even though she promised she would[/quote]
viewtopic.php?p=409488#p409488And to think you're only 14.[/quote]
in 2000, the estimated world population was 6,083,550,220.
in 2000, 209,000 people around the world died from leukemia.
Therefore, approximately
0.0034% of the world population died from leukemia.
According to the 2000 US census, the American population was 281,421,906.
2,819 lost their lives in the 9/11 attack.
Therefore, the percentage of Americans who died in 9/11 is
0.0010%.
The theoretical statistical probability of any one person dieing from both events is the product of the two, which is (3.4x10^-8)%. That corresponds to
one in 2.94 billion. That's 2,940,000,000.
Of course, the probability is going to be somewhat lower taking other family members into consideration, but I've already convinced myself that this really hasn't happened, without even needing to consider your Dad dying in Iraq, and your brother dying in a ski accident. The statistical probability is just too ridiculously low. I'll believe cows can fly before I believe all of the above is actually true.