It is also quite dangerous to peddle this type of simplistic twaddle as serious science since it not only appeals to the already credulous but may also influence those who in all innocence aren't familiar with how numeric data should be presented or that how these data are collected is important (especially so if the method used isn't specified).
The daftness of dear old Stoney's approach is even more obvious if we change the characteristics just for illustration:
Suppose one man in every ten is taller than 6 feet and four inches, and one man in 100 has a fondness for wearing neckties, then one man in every 1,000 ( the product of 10 and 100) is both taller than six feet and four inches and likes neckties.
There are any number of questions about these statistics (in addition to whether or not they are true, which I'm not suggesting they are) - but, for example, what was the age range of the sample was used to assess fondness for neckties? This would be important to know if it was the case that some aspects of dress preference varied across the age spectrum - stuff like that.
That Stoney's stuff is still be referenced by Christian websites reeks of desperation.