0% chance Aucontraire ?I wouldn't be as pessimistic as you suggest. There's always a chance. Simply a mathematical
estimate based on the variable risks. You wouldn't have a zero percent chance unless any of
the associated risks were guaranteed to be 0%.
There are many associated risks... take just three of them and multiply together. If you use
50% for each risk, just three of them multiplied together would equal 12.5%. Using four associated risks
would lower that to 6.25%... and so on.