I refuse to buy the things. It wouldn't be so bad if the primary participants were folks w/ their financial lives together wanting to have some fun, but I think we all know that's not usually the case. Imagine my chagrin then when my wife- who has never showed the slightest interest in the lottery in the 11+ years we've been together- insisted on buying one! She couldn't even really say why, or what "dreams" she would pursue with the winnings (have me bumped off maybe :-0). It was like being in one of those zombie movies, where my Loyal Partner and I were the only survivors of the Zombie Apocalypse, and we're in farmhouse, surrounded, ready to make our last stand and I realize that AAARGH! MY LOYAL PARTNER IS A ZOMBIE TOO!!!
So at the risk of being branded totally clueless I have to ask: what is the appeal of that amount of money, specifically, vs. a run-of-the-mill lottery jackpot? I have never seen so many people who "never buy a ticket", who did this time I mean, I get the math; $700 million > say $ 70 million. But still- what can you do with $700 mil that you can't do w/ "only" 7 or 50 or 70 million? Couldn't a winner of less money also improve his lot in life, help others, set up charities, etc? Not to the same magnitude obviously, but still. It seems that if one doesn't object to the lottery in principle, and believed it was actually a feasible means of helping himself or others (or just enjoyed the fantasy of "what if?") they ought to play MORE often, since that would seem to be the only realistic way of increasing one's chances of winning.