Does there exist a probability distribution on $\mathbb{Z}$ such that for every integer $n\geq 1$, the probability that a random integer $x$ is divisible by $n$ equals $1/n$?
Henry Cohn has an argument why this is not possible, but it is not completely rigorous. First, it is easy to see that we can assume that the distribution is supported on the positive integers. Let $p_n$ be the probability of $n$. For any function $f$ on the positive integers for which we get convergence, we have (by the assumption on $p_n$) $$ \sum_k p_k\sum_{n|k}f(n) = \sum_n \frac{f(n)}{n}. $$ Let $g(k)=\sum_{n|k} f(n)$. By Möbius inversion, $f(n) = \sum_{k|n}g(k)\mu(n/k)$. Writing $n=mk$, the first equation becomes $$ \sum_k p_k g(k) =\sum_k g(k)\sum_m \frac{\mu(m)}{mk}. $$ This should hold for all $g$ for which $\sum_n f(n)/n$ converges absolutely, so it should follow that $$ p_k = \frac 1k\sum_m \frac{\mu(m)}{m}. $$ This is nonsense since first of all, $\sum_m \mu(m)/m =0$ (equivalent to the prime number theorem), and even if we didn't know that, there's no way $p_k$ can be proportional to $1/k$ since $\sum 1/k=\infty$.
This argument is not completely rigorous since we have interchanged sums and equated coefficients of $g(k)$ without justification. It's also a problem that $\sum_m \mu(m)/m$ is conditionally convergent.