I have just two things to say:
Matthew 7:3 and
Occam's Razor.
The first is Jesus, Himself, telling us to be
inwardly focused, rather than passing judgment on those around us.
We all need to take a hard look in the mirror to solve the mess
that is us, or we may start spreading that mess through rumor and innuendo. His words compared the sawdust in our neighbor's eye to the plank in our own. Like Monster energy drinks, or don't like them. But to pass judgment on an entire company, its products and employees based on rumor and innuendo; how big of a plank do you think that points to on our side?
The second, Occam's Razor, is a mathematical argument used in solving problems of logic: where two competing theories reach the same conclusion, the simpler theory is almost always the right one.
And remember God created math.
Which is the simpler theory (barring actual evidence to the contrary)?
a) the stylized "M" on the can looks the way it does because the graphic artist assigned the project was told it needed to relate to the brand name. Or
b) the stylized "M" on the can looks the way it does because there is a massive, hidden conspiracy to place the number "666" on every can in support of satanism.
Someone earlier said we should apply logic, calling this
probably a silly Internet hoax. And then used no logic in explaining away the logical arguments of others, saying the more complicated theory could not be dis-proven, since we couldn't see into the mind(s) of the person(s) responsible.
But that in itself is not logical; we don't need to see anything
but evidence. The Hebrew alphabet is only evidence that the three segments of the stylized "M" could resemble one of three different characters. That's it. What is missing is
any evidence that directly ties that resemblance to the conclusions of the theory. Barring evidence to the contrary, logic tells us we should adopt the simpler theory.
So, one more image before we leave this topic. It's right from this page. Is it symbolism that Satan is winning the argument, or just that this is the last of six pages? Which is the simpler theory? Barring evidence to the contrary, these three sixes (two in front, and one emphasized at the end) just point to the last page as I posted this:
Let's put our faith in Jesus Christ, not in rumors and innuendo.