Funny, as that is exactly what it does NOT support.
The article CLEARLY states that it is unknown.
If it is "unknown", how in the world can you conclude it to be "unlikely"?
Your link does not support your premise, it does the opposite.
It shows that your premise is not justified, not in evidence, unsupported, just an assertion.
The link you posted LITERALLY says otherwise.
Do I need to repeat the quotes??
Here:
These constants represent the edge of our knowledge
An innovative, elegant physical theory that actually predicts the values of these constants would be among the greatest achievements of twenty-first-century physics. Many have tried and failed
There is also no reason to believe that they can.
The point exactly. It is unknown.
You can, and should, ask the question "why these values and not some other values?".
But the answer to that question is currently not known.
Therefor, you can't make any assessment about the probability thereof.
It could be 1 in a gazitrillion and it could be 1 in 1.
Or why they could. It is unknown.
So no assessment can be made concerning the probability of them being what they are. So the premise in your "argument" is not justified.
And there is also nothing to inform us of the opposite.
Because it is unknown.
I never said I don't agree with computer models.
It's not about computer models in general. It's about what they represent and what the justification is for the data you feed into it and, by extension, how reflective of reality they are.