Imagine if for April Fools day Click uploads a ConfidentlyIncorrect video, except all the posts are actually completely true and he just gaslights us into thinking they're not.
Neil Armstrong did not punch a reporter. _Buzz Aldrin_ punched a psycho that followed him onto private property and was in the middle of yelling "you're a coward, and a liar, and a--" and thats when the 72 y/o absolute legend Buzz Aldrin punched him in the face. Dont take that away from him
He also had his granddaughter standing right next to him as that fully grown man came barging up to him. Even the guy he punched thinks Buzz Aldrin was in the right.
A little more context: The “reporter” was a moon landing conspiracy theorist that lured Buzz Aldrin out for an interview under false pretenses, followed him after Buzz told him to leave him alone, then poked him with a bible which lead to Buzz defending himself. 💪
Proof: You would study at gunpoint Just because you point a gun at me and make me sit for an hour or two in front of books, it doesn't mean I'll actually focus on the study material. All you'd be doing is making my ADHD thoughts gun-themed, ie how much getting shot might hurt, how guns work, the last time I went hunting with my dad, the Winchester House, whether or not I'd want to watch Full Metal Jacket, how to apply a tourniquet...
My immediate thought when I saw that was just. Great now you got a bunch of ADHD people wanting to info dump about guns to you because that is all they are going to think about. Like do they really think they can stop the train of intrusive thoughts from crashing into the station because they threatened me with a gun if so they severely underestimate an ADHD person's ability to do anything they are not interested in.
I manage to distract myself without even TV or phone just loosing myself in my toughts a gun Will not stop me for doing that even with a book in front of me, I can memorise the content sure but it doesnt mean I will understand a thing just repeat like a parrot and forget everything the moment I take my exam.
Me when a person with a gun to my head makes me think of the entire lyrics to Twenty One Pilots’ “Guns For Hands”, Green Day’s “21 Guns”, all the gun jokes associated in Jojo’s But Really Really Fast Series, some videos on Forgotten Weapons, the phrase “gunning for x”, gun safety rules, etc.
23:57 OH OH OH! Update on Murphy! He eventually was able to adopt a little eaglet that fell out of his nest and needed a new dad. He raised the eaglet who was released back into the wild. Good job, Murphy!
As a citizen of Chihuahua, Mexico I would love to clarify two things: 1) We get that confusion/ trolling with the dogs really often and 2) Watching The Click while living in Chihuahua makes you a furry.
As someone with ADHD I can confirm that not only is the disorder not real, but I’m not real either. Okay so now that we’ve started this in the comments let me just- I have ADHD and ADD and I’m bi and I’m ace and I’m non-binary and I’m autistic and I have an anxiety disorder.
As someone with ADHD... No, I don't think a gun to my head would actually do anything besides making me even less capable due to the increased anxiety, honestly. It likely wouldn't help here that my adrenaline response isn't "fight" or "flight", it's "freeze".
And even if it worked, it doesnt mean anything to someone 's daily life. I mean, how much you can run while being chased by a murderer with an ax is not a good basis to determinate how much you should run in your daily exercise.
With the example of studying given: I my case I think it would probably work... for a while... then I would look like I'm studying (and actually not be able to recall the last few words I read, or even just "pretend" I'm reading... had A LOT of experience with that as a kid) for a while longer... until I would get too distracted, forget what is happening, and stop completely
My uncle Manolo is from Spain. He got stopped when going to the US and interrogated about where in South America he was from. He told them he was from Spain, he had his Spanish passport. ‘Where in South America is Spain?’ Asked the TSA people. He had to ask them to go get a world map because they wouldn’t believe Spain was in Europe. How do you get that job without knowing there are Spanish speaking people in places other than South America?
Americans are not very smart. It's pretty common for them to not understand that spain is a country. Apparently they don't know history either, otherwise they would have known about the invasion of the Spanish on the Mayans.
I have autism and with how often it gets emphasized how important education is it honestly felt like I had a gun to my head, and guess what all that causes is stress as you desperately try to fight against your brain
That's what I was thinking! I can study just fine if I like the topic, but if you pointed a gun at me while I was studying my favorite subject, there is no way I'd be able to. What the everloving frick? I want to ask this poster if they have tried to prove this theory by actually pointing a gun at someone to make them study, so that I could then report them to the police or fbi and get them put in jail if they admitted to doing so, lol.
Fun fact: The first vaccine used cowpox to prevent smallpox. Unfortunately this led to the Anti Vaccination Society and many people believed that the vaccine would give you cow-like characteristics such as udders or horns ( I had a history lesson on this yesterday and I'm very excited to share it 😂)
It's like that math one that was in.. I want to say the previous video (could be 2 videos ago though), with the tweet poll that didn't have the correct answer as an option. I'll honestly admit that I struggle with those, one of the subs that took over our math class may have taught us wrong 😅
Unfortunately, Click missed pointing out something important there. He is correct, but there are other situations where this logic is completely justified, which means recognizing which you have is important. Specifically, any scenario where choices "use up" outcomes is affected by the previous choices. Example: I have a bag in which there are three white balls and three black ones. If I put the balls in every time I pull one out and then draw three black balls that are returned to the bag, then the Gambler's Fallacy is incorrect. However, if every time a ball is removed it is thrown away, then if I withdrew three black balls and threw them away it most definitely does impact the color of the next ball.
@@davidnasset9147 You're right that there are situations where its more likely, but that's not what anyone was talking about. His example, and the conversation that lead to it, was referring to a situation where EVERY chance is 50/50. The fallacy is just believing that one event occurs more frequently than expected when THE CHANCES ARE EQUAL then the chances of the alternate occuring is more likely. Your example is not equal past the first gamble, so it is not part of the fallacy, for or against it. What you're describing is literally JUST statistics. The fallacy is assuming statistics change for no reason, or simply reading statistics wrong.
Murphy the bald eagle has a great story. He was incubating a rock, but an eaglet was brought to the zoo after losing his family in a storm. The zookeepers switched him with Murphy's rock. Murphy raised him and he was released back into the wild when he was grown.😊
The wine one cracked me up. My grandparents used to live in an area where a ton of wild trees grew little fruits on them, smaller than cherries. Towards the end of their fruiting season, they would begin to ferment. Wild birds would eat them and drunkenly crash into buildings on a regular basis. Nah, the earth has never produced a single drop of alcohol.
There is a little documentation about animals getting drunk from eating very ripe/fermented fruits. i've seen it as a child a few times. Was my first thought when he read the post.
Bees will legit get evicted from the hive after coming home drunk from drinking flower nectar that ferments on hot days. The Bertam plant's nectar has the highest alcohol content of any naturally occurring food and has the same potency as manmade beer. The tree shrews that live in the same area have livers of steel because they drink that nectar like its water.
The Chihuahua thing reminds me of that time someone said that 50% of gay people engage in *that kind* of child abuse, but the study they sent me said that 50% of gay people were victims of it as kids, saying nothing about the perpetuation of that abuse. He whined about it until the discord server banned him lmao. Maybe next time he'll bother to read the abstract.
There are legit some people who believe there's a 1:1 relationship between having been abused, and abusing others. I think that also contributes to the spread of misinformation about queer people allegedly being dangerous.
@@thou_dog It absolutely does. It sucks, because it makes me paranoid that someone's gonna off me like that woman in California who hung a pride flag in her store window. :( A certain demagogue was quick to wash his hands of responsibility, though, despite spreading the rhetoric that people like me are somehow dangerous. :/
"Paint didn't exist in ancient times." Not only is that false, of course, but the assertion is moot anyway. The pyramids were originally covered in LIMESTONE. Paint was not needed.
Hell, if the pyramids were painted white, they might actually have possibly had a point, since maintaining a painted surface on that large of a structure would have likely been an absolute nightmare, especially with the paints they had at the time. But yeah, Tura limestone is already white, no paint needed.
@@anitacrumbly I think you misinterpreted my comment. When I said "they might have had a point", I wasn't referring to the pyramids, but rather the original confidently incorrect commenter in the video. I can see where my comment might have given you the wrong impression though; the wording is fairly ambiguous.
In addition, those of us who take twice as long to do certain tasks, so we have to figure out if we have the time and energy to do something productive.
Oh god, the paralysis is so bad. I want to do something, I need to do it, and I'm staring at it, knowing it's super easy, and I STILL CAN'T DO IT. It can be anything, from going to the bathroom, to getting a drink, to starting that one email, or getting dressed. Like, I NEED to go to the bathroom and for some reason I can't make myself stand up and do it until it's really really pressing.
@@AnnekeOosterink And even if you fight it somehow and start to do any task in your head you are still in this state so you start to loop inside of the head about next steps making you go sit back again and paralize even stronger xD Daily dose of frustration, that you can't even take out because you're paralized xD I already told my family not so long ago that I'm frustrated or angry all the time but I hide 80% of it bc I would be rude at all times and I don't want to be this person xDD
Props to him for not doubling down like some podcast bros would. He took the L, processed it, and arrived at the correct conclusion in seconds. Respect.
"With sticks!" -- The ancient Greeks figured out the Earth was round because the Earth's shadow on the moon during a lunar eclipse is always round, and the only shape that casts a round shadow from all angles is a globe. Eratosthenes's experiment with the sticks measured the radius of the Earth, and he was within a few percent.
@@flamefangstar A lunar eclipse is when the sun casts the Earth’s shadow on the moon - and because the shadow is a circle (and the only shape that can cast a circle from any angle is a sphere) then that means the earth is round
The one about Chihuahua… I’m reminded of during the 2020 US election where they claimed that the state of Georgia had more votes than their population… and showed the population of the country of Georgia.
My boyrfriend sent me one of those "I'm just asking questions" conspiracy things, where the guy said "The ISS has been orbiting for 20 years, there have been around 100 eclipses over that time, so why haven't they taken any photos of an eclipse from the ISS? Really makes you think..." the other day. As an avid Kerbal Space Program fan I was like "ooo I know this one!" and started talking about how the inclination of the ISS's orbit and the Moons orbit are completely different, so the chances of the ISS crossing the path of an active eclipse isn't actually that great, and that the speed of the ISS would give them about a 30 second window before passing out of the shadow of the eclipse, I ended with "But to answer their key question, here's a link to a photo of an eclipse taken from on board the ISS last October."
Wait O_O there is one? I'll go check it out. But yeah one time a flat earther was trying to convince me that gravity doesn't exist and it's only a matter a density and buoyancy. I was like >_> "Bro, how do you think those 2 things happen."
"The chances of the ISS crossing the path of an active eclipse isn't actually that great ... but here's a link to a photo of an eclipse from the ISS" Honestly love that. Not only explains why photos of an eclipse from the ISS are unlikely to be taken, but still provides proof that it's possible _and has happened recently._ Just completely explains it in pretty easy to understand terms and shuts down their entire argument. If only they would realize their mistake after getting it explained to them, but you know if you actually tried they'd just respond with "nuh-uh, do your research." lol.
@@tunasci Fine actually, he really enjoys the stories of conspiracy theories but doesn't actually believe them, and he knows I enjoy crapping on them so he sends me stuff he thinks will set me off :D
I have ADD and my dad said "If your apartment building was on fire you'd get out of there real quick". The fact I had to think about it should tell you everything you need to know. Sure, if I have a plane to catch or some other extremely important thing that has severe consequences if I miss it I'll usually make it in time. But it's extremely exhausting and it doesn't extend to every day situations. It would be impractical to set my apartment on fire every day to get out of the house, for instance.
The adrenalin kick that gets us moving in an emergency doesn't hesitate to present its bill afterwards. I have a fatigue disorder and yes, I could leap out of bed pretty quick if the house were on fire - but I'd probably faint as soon as I reached safety.
Not exactly the same, but i have adhd. One time, a room in my house lit on fire (here's it's called the lavadero, basically a room in your backyard where the washing machine goes, unsure of the english name). I was the first to notice. You know what i did? Nothing, i froze. Only later did i kick into gear, but it took a while. So, there you go, proof that your house being on fire wouldn't necessarily make you do anything faster lol. Ps: my house was fine afterwards
@@denjidenji9162 There's also the fight/flight/freeze reflex. Right back from our earliest mammal ancestors hiding in the undergrowth hoping the big dinosaur wouldn't see them and eat them, one of our reactions to something life-threateningly dangerous has been to freeze. You'll see it most often in people who have been assaulted, and people who weren't there ask "Why didn't she scream? Why didn't she try to fight?" and the reason why she didn't scream or fight was because her whole body was literally paralysed by fear. It's not a choice, it's built in and completely outside our control.
Yeah, I'm fairly confident I wouldn't be running very fast even if there was a fire, Especially since I've had to reset the alarm so many times I am almost completely unbothered by it nowadays.
People with adhd actually are shown to perform better in emergency situations than others. We are more focused and calm. I’m pretty sure any person would move quick of there was a fire in their house. I’m not sure how that correlates daily life. Even people who are on time and always in a hurry most likely move quicker when the house is on fire then on a normal day 😂
The worst part about this is that I've seen people say that this invalidates unlikely things being unlikely for example the chance of flipping a coin and it being heads 100 times in a row is very low but I've seen people say that "No it's still a 50% chance" I like to call this "The reverse gambler's fallacy".
@@kakahass8845 Yep, I mean technically if you're counting only the beginning of every flip, yeah, 50% all the way through, but in general? Somewhere in the hundreds of thousands percentile, maybe even millionths of a percent of a chance.
The gambling one reminds me of the guy who so confidently tried to tell me that my chances of being trans are 1/1000 and so are my child's, so the chances of us both being trans are 0.000009%. We're both trans. He said it as a way to get me to "reconsider" being trans. Like, dude, we're already trans! That's not how statistics work! Even if his numbers were correct, which they are not.
Whenever I feel dumb, I always remind myself that there is a country in which the 1/3 pound burger failed because people thought it'd be smaller than the 1/4 pound burger. You'll never guess what country that was.
23:52 fun fact about Murphy, later on that year a bald eagle nest fell out of a tree, and by miracle one of the eggs survived. They brought them back to the zoo and gave Murphy his chance at father hood, which he succeeded at greatly. A couple years later the chick was released into the wild, and it was given the name rocky
It's quite possible that his paternal instincts will be re-activated in the future and he'll incubate another rock (or if the chance presents itself another chick).
23:48 IMPORTANT UPDATE: Murphy's determination to incubate rocks was such that the zookeepers gave him an actual egg to help raise alongside a lady eagle named Shannon, and they are now proud parents together! Murphy continues to preen the young eaglet and tend to it as it grows. IMPORTANT UPDATE 2: Despite being disabled and unable to fly, Murphy was able to teach the eaglet, named Rocky, how to fly. Rocky's mom, Shannon, is partially blind and non-releasable, as is Murphy. Rocky, however, was able to be released into the wild to go contribute to eagle conservation efforts. Murphy and Shannon, though they haven't mated, continue to be good friends and spend time with each other frequently, including napping beside each other and sharing meals.
@@LordHorstIt gets better! Rocky, the eaglet, has learned to fly and was able to be released into the wild. Although Murphy is disabled and can't fly himself, he and Rocky's mom Shannon were able to demonstrate enough of the wing positions for Rocky to learn and be able to fly as he matured.
@@noth1ng5idSecond update: the eaglet, named Rocky, has been able to learn to fly and has been released into the wild. Murphy and Shannon, Rocky's mom, remain close friends. Although both eagles are disabled, they were able to teach Rocky to fly regardless, and now he's been able to return to their ancestral forests.
The ADHD one reminds me of "we're all a little Autistic" and "depression is just being sad". Wow, almost like whether something is classified as a disorder is majorly dependent on if it inhibits your daily life and people can share traits but not qualify for diagnosis because their symptoms are manageable(which doesn't discard that you can still use advice and strategies designed for people with the diagnosis, no matter whether you have it, don't, or aren't sure!). We really need to start specifying what is meant by "normal" when so many diagnostic criteria are "experieces this thing more/less than normal"
Shaming people in the gym is ridiculous... As a fitness coach, I may see people that look like they're not doing an exercise right, but unless they're doing something really dangerous that may hurt them, I never interfere. Because it's none of my business. Because I don't really know what they're working on, it may be something completely different. Actually, anyone who shames people like this is very unprofessional and has no business critiquing others.
Right? Or maybe they have a different need and have had to adjust the exercise to accommodate their differences in ability or whatever. So long as they aren't gonna hurt themselves, who cares?
Honestly, the fear of people making fun of me is one of the reasons I don't go to the gym (aside from the cost). I have to rebuild so much muscle mass after I become disabled and I can lift so little and only do exercises in short bursts. Having a place with all the equipment already is ideal, but I worry people will mock my lack of skills or be creepy because I'm a woman.
@@fallenking578 I have trouble processing things at the time they happen and get overwhelmed so I agree but if I could process faster I'd simply tell them to mind their own business because I genuinely don't care about their opinion. Not sure how they'd react to that but I'm told when I talk to assholes I get super polite...
Pretty much as long as the gym goers aren't dropping the weights & aren't being jerks or monkeying around, I tend to assume they're fine on their own. As an introvert, I keep to myself anyways, so let the staff & other people deal with the very few times I've seen people be a "lunk" at the gym. Lol, usually I'm looking at the TVs unless crow brain sees shiny things &/or major movement in my peripheral, so no idea if there's really that much going on at my gym, honestly. Seems pretty chill, but those kinds of videos make me a little uncomfortable with the possibility of ending up in the background like that anyways. Let's just hope that if it happens, it's when I'm a bit more toned up & my RBF fits whatever the context of the clip is. 😄
I think that flat earther gave the game away when he said "they want us to believe we are on a ball with little purpose". Because, looking at a lot of them, it all comes down to a fear of insignificance. If it was literally random chance that human life came to be-- luck of chemicals and energy forming life on this planet, that means theres no greater plan, there's no inherent meaning to it all, and thats terrifying to them. They need to believe an extrenal force gave them significance and worth, instead of finding it in their own lives, even if its scary.
It always seemed to me that having the sole purpose of being there to worship what created me was pretty pointless in and of itself anyway. Eventually I realized that all the bears, chickadees, macaques, guppies and so on didn't worry about that, and they got along just fine. And if the universe seems terrifyingly huge, well, it always was there doing what it's still doing so why not let it get on with things and I'll sit here with the cat? Things got simpler after that. Well, a little simpler. Except I have a lot more cats.
I always wonder how flat earthers explain why we fly eastwards to Asia from Europe but from the westcoast of the Americas, it is westwards. Doesn't make sense to me if the earth is flat. Or will the say that the GPS tracker you see on your flight is just a big lie to fool you into thinking you fly westward or eastward?
@@Fluffy-Fluffy been there argued that, they believe in... and I shit you not, the Pac-Man effect. Basically you just pop out the other side of the flat map.
@@pagedmaj Pac-Man effect? Almost like there's a known shape that doesn't have an edge and if you travel in a straight line you're bound to return to your starting point. So, they'll literally make up anything to just not come to terms with the fact that the earth is spherical. Lol
@@im_aleey at least it's an explanation, at one point I tried debunking one of them and their argument was literally "why can't I believe what I want". 💀
aDhD iSnT rEaL "Proof, YOU WOULD STUDY AT GUNPOINT" My ADHD ass: Oh thank god you're gonna shoot me. For a second there I thought I might actually have to study
I gave my 9-year-old brother the "sawing the board" question, and he answered correctly on the first try. How can adults, let alone a teacher, get it wrong? And act so confident on top of that?
Well, to be completely fair, if you grab a square plank and take 10 minutes to saw it in half, if you grab one of the halves and cut it in half to make two squares again, due to being half as long it would take half as much time. But the fact that the teacher didn't specify anything in this hypothetic case means no answer is truly correct, nor is it wrong
I think this question is a brilliant example of an equasion that was simply disguised as a text question. It is entirely removed from the real world, they simply took a random example and filled the blanks with the premade numbers, in this case, I assume, to make a child solve for x=5. The question would have worked with cutting a specific shape out of a board, or filling a bucket of water, or whatever. I struggled a lot with math, in part due to bullshit like this.
It took me ages to even understand how you could possibly get the wrong answer (15) as an answer for that. The concept of it taking 5 minutes to cut the board into 1 is so mind boggling it didn't even occur to me 😂
@@kristophesiem5336 I was thrown by your explanation until I changed the perspective to 1/2 as "wide" & factor-in that it really wouldn't qualify as a plank. Once I got the idea of it, though, that's a really out-of-the-box cool take on the problem!
honestly if the earth was flat disney would've built a theme park to the edge already with the tagline "jump off the edge of the world!" like in the fifties
I think if the Earth was really flat scientists would be all over that damned ice wall, drilling it and x-raying it and whatnot, not hiding it! RUclips would be full of videos of sunburned to a crisp polar scientists showing us what they are doing with the wall today!!!
Yeah, 8:20 gave me the same feelings as when I'm playing a Bethesda game and instead of just neatly falling over, the enemy I've just killed catapults up into the atmosphere while writhing wildly, never to be seen again. I was ALMOST very mad at the racism, but then it was all instantly overwritten with a Niagara Falls worth of Utter Confusion. AND THE GAMBLING ONE. Oh god. There's a phrase I saw in a book once that's stuck with me ever since; 'The dice have no memory'. I urge people thinking about gambling to also remember this phrase.
Without getting into anything scientific, a major problem with flat earth is that EVERY single government worldwide would have to agree to keep this secret
Exactly. And WHY would they want to hide it? You can't believe all humans working even slightly within the field are a hivemind controlled by the devil, OOOooooOoo 👻
Even if it was real, this would only confound the problem because of the simple question of "what force on Earth could convince this many people with this many different viewpoints on how to run things to actually agree on that this should kept secret from anyone? *_What_* is out there?"
A cool thing about bismuth: it’s a metal. It naturally curls. You can melt it but when it dries and if it isn’t in a mold, it will naturally go back to its curly form
@@Bucketnetta The word "solidify" is the most commonly used when referring to a liquid metal becoming a solid metal - while "freeze" _is_ more accurate than "dry", I will warn that people will look at you weird if you use "freeze" _or_ "dry" when talking about phase changes in metals when speaking/writing in English.
45:10 I will never forget when I was in 7th grade, my math teacher gave us a quiz on algebra after she had taught us how we might go about solving it. She taught us a specific way of writing it out in order to break down the problem which is totally fine and does get the right answer when done correctly. I always did very well with these problems when practicing them in class, always getting the right answer. And yet, when she handed out the graded quizzes, I had received a 2 (my school system had switched to standards-based grading so the best score was a 4 and 2 was basically a low D). All my answers were identical to those who got a 4 and so were the steps I took to get the answer. Why did I get such a low grade on the quiz? Well, it was because I wrote out my process differently than she had taught us to write it. Rather than using her method which was similar to balancing a scale, I had written my work to be a straight line taking it step by step-a method that made much more sense to me and my AuDHD brain. I want to emphasize that every step I took in solving the equation was the same as what she had taught us, just written out differently. The teacher had also NOT specified that we were supposed to use her exact method of writing out our process before or during the quiz. She had only told me this AFTER I asked her why I had gotten a 2 if all of my answers and work were correct. I was forced to retake the quiz and received a 4 (A+) when the only thing I did differently waS THE WAY I WROTE OUT MY FORKING WORK! YES IM STILL VERY UPSET ABOUT THAT! SCREW YOU MS. HARRINGTON!
Oh man, it was like a question I got when applying for Securitas security company. The question was "Have you ever had a problem with teenage theft". I said yes. The hiring manager wouldn't hire me, because he said me saying yes to that meant I was a thief when I was a teenager. I said no, me saying yes to that means that I've been a security guard for 5 years and have had a problem with teenagers stealing from the stores I was guarding.
24:00 Murphys story is kind of wholesome. he has broken wing so he cant fly and is the reason why he is kept there, and at some point he started to incubate a "egg" that turned out to be a rock. after some time he go to rise a orphan eagle as his own that he raised successfully :)
*Monkey blood part:* Here is a quote from Wikipedia from the "Rh blood group system" article ("History" section): The term "Rh" was originally an abbreviation of "Rhesus factor". It was discovered in 1939 by Karl Landsteiner and Alexander S. Wiener, who, at the time, believed it to be a similar antigen found in rhesus macaque red blood cells. It was subsequently discovered that the human factor is not identical to the rhesus monkey factor, but by then, "Rhesus Group" and like terms were already in widespread, worldwide use.
16:15 Hebrew speaker here- the pronounciation of NASA in hebrew has several meanings, but NONE of them are to lie / decieve. It is the past tense of to Drive, Carry, Bring with and to flee (for female subjects)...
@@confusedaf1112 Also all of these words are in third person singular past, and except for flee (which is feminine) they have ultimate accent, while the NASA acronym is in penult accent... If you REALLY want to learn Hebrew, I can recommend the youtube channel "Aleph with Beth", which will tell you that "nasá" also means "marry"...
That guy talking about how alcohol is a man made thing is even more wrong lol. Alcohol exists in nature, i watched a documentary on elephants and they were following this herd that migrates to a body of water every year (or few years, cant remember which) and they talked about how on the way they'd stop at these fruit trees and would purposefully eat the fruit that had fallen and fermented on the ground instead of just picking good and ripe fruit from the trees. They also showed other animals that also migrated there doing this too, it was funny watching them kinda stumbling around 🤣 So yes, animals also enjoy getting drunk just as much as humans! (This doesnt mean that you should give your pets alcohol though. If you do, you need to make sure its something safe for them to consume and only give them a TINY bit, even if theyre big like a mastiff or something)
Though it's rare, humans can also develop "Auto-brewery Syndrome" where the body converts some carbohydrates into alcohol, giving you the same sensations as drinking.
Some flowers that have larger-than-normal nectar repositories can have the nectar ferment. Seeing a whole lot of drunk bees staggering in circles on the grass under a flowering tree is .. memorable. I don't know if bees get drunk deliberately, but the alcohol is certainly a natural phenomenon and the bees don't avoid it.
Scientifically speaking, if the earth WAS flat, there would be no sun/moon, no gravity, and everything would be pulled to the middle, unable to move. Even if you somehow did reach the edge, you wouldn’t fall down, you would fall sideways.
@@Blatt1247Yes gravity would crush it into a sphere but gravity is strongest in the middle (I'm not exactly sure why) so walking to the sides would feel like climbing an increasingly steeper hill Artifexian made a good video talking about how a flat world might work if it was possible.
@kakahass8845 The original commentor said "no gravity". The original reply mentioned that in the form of a question, noting the inaccuracy of the original thought experiment. They likely knew gravity would pull you towards the center of mass already.
@@kakahass8845Also, gravity is the strongest at "the center of mass of a system" (not always in the center of a celestial body) becuase that would be the lowest potential energy well in Space-Time.
@@Blatt1247 that depends on the material the sphere is made from. If it is made from impossiblum, it could potentially resist gravity's force and remain a disk forever. In which case flat earth would indeed work gravitationally as described ...
Love the comment about how showing your working helps show where you get muddled in maths - teachers could never understand why my working would be correct, but somewhere a would become a 9, or a 4 would become a 7 and my answer would be wrong. We're pretty sure I have dyscalculia (along with ADHD not diagnosed until I was in my 30s), because I struggle if asked a question out loud to remember that 4+7 and 7+4 are the same sum. None of my teachers noticed or considered that I could really be struggling with maths, and especially mental arithmetic, because I went to a school you needed to pass an exam to get into. So instead, I got put in what one teacher referred to as "the thicky set" for maths, where my teacher would routinely yell at me for "not trying". When in chemistry, we got to the quantitative stuff, and I told my teacher my homework was late because I was struggling with the numbers and wanted to get it right, she slammed her hand into the wall next to me and roared "well you must be stupid then!" It's been fun, getting my diagnosis of ADHD and realising that every single time I was made to feel like my inability to do something was a moral failure, it was ingraining deep self-hatred and maladaptive coping mechanisms that it's going to take me decades to unlearn.
The goofy post about Chihuahua's killing children actually made me look up how often children are killed by small dogs, I couldn't find anything. I don't think it's completely impossible for a smaller dog to kill someone though, a bad bite can easily get infected no matter how big the dog it came from.
There was an old lady killed by a pack of dachshunds in Oklahoma. I remember seeing it on the news awhile ago but it’s been too long to remember the details.
Yep, I know someone who survived an infected dog bite, and he doesn't have any fingers and had to have both legs amputated below the knee because of sepsis
If ADHD isn't real then my primary doctor, my therapist, group home supervisor, and the university research panel that diagnosed me have a LOT of explaining to do.
With the whole Gambling = buying a used car that was in a wreck analogy, the person who used the analogy has a point, but it would probably be *more* likely to crash, not because of the person driving, but because minor damage that didn't need to be repaired at the time of the accident getting worse and potentially leading to bad consequences if left unchecked by the new owner.
Hey click, I'm sorry but you were confidently incorrect about the viking sunstone, that is selenite, it is effectively natural fiberoptics, so it does have an optical quality, however what you need for a viking Sunstone is optical grade calcite, the optical quality it has is called birefringence, this allows it to split light into 2 rays instead of 1, you look through it at the sky and its partially covered to form a slit of light, when the stone is properly oriented toward the source of light (even behind clouds or under the horizon) the 2 slits you see will be the same brightness.
@@moon-moth1 I'm just a pagan jewler and survivalist lol tho my grandfather was a geologist lol I've used a sunstone to navigate at sea before for the lulz You also need a twilight board and shadow stick tho to me entirely honest it's been ages and idk if I could still use one without some practice
@@Creativelife1031 noice, I have always wanted to work at one of my local ones but they are never hiring lol that and dispensaries seem like great places to work lol you know the kinds if place where they wont get mad when you ask for time off to restore a river ecosystem// will let you put up petitions to reintroduce a local species lol
Sorry slight rant: As someone who is pretty allergic to milk I have run into MANY people surprised I can eat eggs and I have explained MORE times than I would like to say that eggs are in fact NOT dairy. "But they both come from an animal" they say which I reply "so does meat but at least you know THATS not dairy" And yes I know that when someone is allergic to one more than likely they are allergic to the other but COME ON why would eggs be considered dairy in any sense of the word?
Perhaps it''s because some people could have conflated the "dairy" label with the mix of animal-derived products that differentiate vegan and vegetarian diets, which would include both milk *_and_* eggs. 🤷♂
Fun fact about bismuth: they are diamagnetic, which means they repel each other in the same way magnets do. You could theoretically use this by placing two flat circles of bismuth perfectly on top of each other, making the top one float!
It’s not that they’re repelled by each other; they’re repelled by a magnetic field. You can float a chunk of bismuth over strong enough magnet. If you’ve seen two pieces of bismuth repel each other it’s probably because they were in a strong magnetic field. There’s a video on the channel NightHawkInLight in which he makes a stand out of 2 bismuth crystals and suspends a magnet between them.
If you look more into Murphy's story it turns cute. A baby eagle got rejected by it's parents so Murphy was allowed to adopt it. Since he was already trying to have a kid the zoo keepers decided to let him adopt
24:02 that's kinda sad, because some of Australia's most recognizable birds, cassowaries and emus, both have the dad exclusively taking care of the eggs and chicks. The mother's job is done after laying the eggs. So they don't even know about the animals on their own continent. Also that bird sanctuary with the eagle is in America.
There’s this great bit in Futurama where the professor is arguing with this ape guy who says evolution is a myth. The professor keeps naming different ancestors and the ape guy keeps saying “well where is the link between those ones?” The fast forward until they have like 30 connections and when he can’t answer one he goes “you see you can’t prove it!” Unfortunately it feels like some people actually think like this. It doesn’t matter how many connections you have. If you are missing one then it’s all just guess work and you can’t prove anything.
22:52 As a space nerd I am internally and externally screaming. 1 It’s being commercialised *as we SPEAK!* 2 We are quite literally going back *NEXT YEAR!*
@@rolfs2165 We have returned with human beings. Armstrong/Aldrin Conrad/Bean Shepherd/Mitchell Scott/Irwin - 1st time Lunar Rover vehicle driven on the moon Young/Duke Cernan/Schmitt - 3 days and 3 moonwalks.
@@hoshireed77 With "return" most people mean "after the Apollo program ended". Armstrong and Aldrin in particular didn't "return", they were the first to set foot on the moon. Unless you believe that a prehistoric lunar civilisation fled to Earth after turning the Moon into a lifeless rock …
People with ADHD can study, its about how the brain focuses on and retains whats being studied. Nobody's saying they foam at the mouth and black out if they crack a text book
Legit the need to take a 10 minute break every 5 minutes is real I don't do school anymore but when I did my attention span for actually studying sucked.
When I was of school age I used to "waste" time doing my hobbies all day just to wake up at 5am and do what my friends spent the whole previous day studying. It was a sort of sprint study that let me remember all the things I needed to learn for the day. My grades were better than others and I still remember most of those informations years later. If I tried studying at normal times like my friends did I would just get frustrated and not study anything the whole day, compared to me knowing I had to be in school in less than 4hours transformed me into a fast learning machine for those hours. That's ADHD for you lol
Oh that wonderful combination when your ADHD and your old friend depression are both having a sleepover in your head and not even a pewpew to your head could convince you to get out of bed to study (or clean, or eat). Good times 😐
18:04 This is the argument I used against a "we didn't go to the moon" conspiracy theoriest. I told him put all the science aside, how many people would have to agree to cooperate to pull that kind of thing into effect. People agross different classes, countries, political leanings, religions, so on and so forth. All these people would not only have to agree to it but then successfully pull it off. He chose to ignore that argument and instead insult my intelligence and bring up how well he understood the science. I still get pissed off just thinking of him and/or that conversation.
It's like playing chess against a pigeon: no matter what brilliant moves you do to corner them, they'll knock over all the pieces, shit on the board and swagger around like they won.
Why haven't we returned to the moon? Funding. Coin. The public purse. 🪙 Unfortunately all that money redirected from NASA and the NSF is going to many of the same government contractors to build things that destroy themselves and take people's lives and homes and communities with them. Genocide toys. 🚀→💣 Instead of towards the science the people need to have some actual quality of life: housing, healthcare, a habitable planet etc. 🌏
There's a quote that fits these people to a tee (Cannot remember where it comes from): "The very powerful and the very stupid have one thing in common: They don't alter their views to fit the facts, they alter the facts to fit their views."
@@DirgeTVThe 4th Doctor said that. Followed by, "Which can be very uncomfortable if you happen to be one of the facts that needs altering." I use that quote often in reference to being LGBT+: Our existence is a fact that doesn't fit the Views of the religionists. So they try to "alter us" out of existence.
The thing about the roulette table is called probablity/randomness bias. When digital playlists first introduced shuffle/random options, people complained when the 2 consecutive songs were played in order because they thought it couldn't be random. So the shuffle feature was changed so this can't happen, thus making it less random to feel more random.
I believe there were different algorithms: each time a new song was played, it was chosen at random (with replacement) and then changed to the whole playlist be randomly generated from the possible songs (without replacement) then played through. Both are still random
@@jacquimott386Yes, and I think that's what the problem was. The Use-Case said, "Play the playlist in a random order," but the software developer heard, "Randomly pick something from the playlist each time and play that." The user wanted: "Shuffle my playlist," the programmer went, "Got it - use a random number generator to pick the next song." The two are not the same. Of course, most people, when faced with a shuffled list of, "2, 1, 4, 5, 6, 3" will claim, "bUt It'S nOt RaNdOm!" because of the "4,5,6" sequence. There's another study where groups of people were asked to simulate dice-throws by writing down "randomly seleced" numbers from the set of 1 through 6. I think they were asked to generate a list of 100 such "randomly selected" numbers. It was easy to identify which lists were created by people and which were created by an actual pRNG, because the human-created ones never had runs of the same number and never had the numbers appear in any sort of sequence [like I did above]. People don't understand the concept of random-variables or randomness.
I also thought insects weren't animals. When I was 4. Then my dad asked me "then what are they? plants? rocks?" and I realized these flying, crawling things that are clearly alive must also count as animals. Would love to know what the person at 30:05 thinks they are.
I don't know if the person at 24:30 is Korean, but if he is, that's way too common. Every country tries to whitewash their legacy by skimming through certain parts of history. We're often taught how additional territories simply "became" part of the territory, without discussing how that happened. And if this seems like a typically American problem, it's because you haven't questioned the history of your own country. This shouldn't be seen as something natural and inevitable; it should be fought against.
That's what always fascinated me in other countries. Because Germany does teach how we f* up in the WWs and that there is an explanation but not a good excuse. What frightens me is that the number of people saying that it is more or less irrelvant. Sure: you have little to do with that now - but it is your history/legacy, too. Those that don't know history are bound to repeat it. People usually look into recent history - and SK was the victim pretty much through the entire 20th century - but that misses out on the other side of history - the before and how it worked. I'm afraid of a time where it will be taught in Germany as "not so bad: here look at what was good".
He is Korean but born and raised in America, iirc. He's pretty funny. And he was totally wrong, as shown. I don't think it is taught in school in Korea, my kids are just starting elementary school in Korea so I'll update you in 12 years. I do know they emphasize the most recent 130 years in history class like we do in America. From what I remember from studying Korean slavery in college, Korea didn't target other ethnicities for slavery. They mainly enslaved other Koreans, like a class system. It has been quite a while and we didn't focus too much on it.
@@ruthfischer7615 To be fair it's kind of already happened in the US. I grew up in a part of the US with alot of German heritage (myself included). I don't know if this line of thinking is common throughout the US or only in areas of high German ancestry. But basically all of WWII is blamed on the allies of WWI. What is even crazier is the line of thinking when carried to its conclusion means that these same allies should have started WWIII. Basically we were taught that all blame for WWII (especially in terms of Germany) was due to the Treaty of Versailles, and especially a clause establishing German guilt for WWI. So basically WWII was caused because the WWI victorious allies said Germany was guilty of causing the war. Therefore, we were blaming the allies for causing WWII, which theoretically should cause them to start WWIII using the Treaty of Versailles line of thinking... (Also reparations, but the Marshall Plan was like reparations in a way). Luckily, in college and doing my own research I was able to find out that "blaming" WWII on the Treaty of Versailles has begun to fall out of fashion outside of far right, neo-Nazi circles. But yeah interestingly enough in the US, we were taught that the US, UK, and France caused WWII, at least in my public school.
1:20 its like the question of 'if an orchestra of 30 takes 45 minutes to finish a symphony how long would it take to finish it for 60?' the same amount cause that's not how that works...
23:02 We have returned to the moon! Armstrong/Aldrin weren't the only two to walk on the moon. Conrad/Bean Shepherd/Mitchell Scott/Irwin - 1st time Lunar Rover vehicle driven on the moon Young/Duke Cernan/Schmitt - 3 days and 3 moonwalks. 12 people landed and walked on the surface (some even drove), 6 stayed in orbit while they did it in the command module.
Not only is the claim based on a scam but the person who did the study lied about the followup, lied about what some of the Parents had said about when and where they started having issues and to 'prove' his point he tortured children. There is an INCREDIBLE video from hbomberguy that I can't recommend enough on this.
It took me a short while to figure out what "the claim" was you referred to. I understood it was about vaccines causing autism but next timr if you want to go back to any meme, it would be helpful to either put a timestamp or actually say "the vaccine caused autism-claim" or something like that 😊
19:40 You can "probably" use this to get extra free trials for some things by adding random dots when you sign up. For legal reasons this is only in "theory" of course, I certainly have never done this ;)
I'm not a gym person, but I love seeing Joey Swole get on and just decimate ignorant individuals with pure facts. His delivery is so smooth and confident even as he dishes out those burns.
I watch his vids as they come out on his youtube and honestly it is so crazy to see how many self centered jerks there are in the world (not that I already haven't seen too many of those people but he highlights just how negatively people like that can affect an entire space)
Remember that things like Steam achievement completion rates include everyone who has ever even just launched the game. So those people who have never died are going to mostly be people who launched the game, tried it for a bit then quit. Add to that people who got the game free/in a bundle and just launched it to get card drops, (if it has them), and new players who haven't died yet.
43:50 Jesus did not only turn water into wine. He turned A LOT of water into A LOT of really good wine for a party. After people had already drunk all the wine that was there before (so we can assume some people were already quite intoxicated)
from my personal life experience i feel like people just bully adhd havers until we don't outwardly show our adhd-ness 😂 i think ive gotten really good at masking to avoid the social negativity
The best thing about the American bald eagle with the rock nest is that the zoo got a baby American bald eagle that had lost it's parents but needed an adult eagle to care for it to survive and gave the male American bald eagle a chance at being a dad and put his nest with the baby in a separate enclosure, the video of him meeting his baby is so cute. He has been raising the baby eagle beautiful and is a very proud dad ❤️ it is truly amazing
One night on Xitter (pronounced "shitter"), a guy didn't the better part of an hour trying to convince me that bats weren't mammals, they were birds. Because they fly. Only birds fly. Mammals can only walk. Finally i told him "okay, you win ", because the stupidity was hurting my brain. He didn't just double down, he gogolplexed down.
Did you ask him why he thought birds could have nipples, fur, and teeth, and give live birth? Also, that's when you counter with "bats aren't birds because birds aren't real" to add some spice to the conversation.
21:30 - To be clear this is _only_ gmail, they did this to be user-friendly and it just causes confusion for most people. Other email providers don't do this, the dots do make different email addresses.
However! Gmail didn't do it at the beginning of things - I got an email address early-ish on in things, and chose one with a dot between my first and last name. If you omit the dot in mine, the email doesn't come to me. (I don't think that it goes to anyone else? But it def. doesn't come to me, as some companies have discovered when they tried to 'fix' my typo. Sigh. Even if I was just trying to do some filter thing, just let me have my systems, people.)
16:25 " Why did Neil Armstrong punch the man who asked if the Moon landing was fake? It was Buzz Aldrin, not Neil Armstrong that punched the man named Bart Sibrel. Sibrel had lured Buzz to a meeting under false pretenses."
Go to buyraycon.com/theclick for 20% off your order, plus free shipping!
Brought to you by Raycon.
nuzzles you in secret.
help not the nuzzles 😭
No need for secrets clicky
Everyone knows
😳
click wdym nuzzles you- 😭
Imagine if for April Fools day Click uploads a ConfidentlyIncorrect video, except all the posts are actually completely true and he just gaslights us into thinking they're not.
That would be epic actually
oh lord dont give him ideas
hm
Sounds like something he would do-
Oh my god please. I'd lose my mind in a good way lmao.
Neil Armstrong did not punch a reporter. _Buzz Aldrin_ punched a psycho that followed him onto private property and was in the middle of yelling "you're a coward, and a liar, and a--" and thats when the 72 y/o absolute legend Buzz Aldrin punched him in the face. Dont take that away from him
He also had his granddaughter standing right next to him as that fully grown man came barging up to him. Even the guy he punched thinks Buzz Aldrin was in the right.
I would have payed good money to be there as a bird in the tree watching. 😂
He's a loser, He's a fossil, and I don't mean to sound hostile, but the demon is a coward!
@@k1sfd1974 Not exactly as front and center as a bird, but there is plenty of video of it to watch!
A little more context: The “reporter” was a moon landing conspiracy theorist that lured Buzz Aldrin out for an interview under false pretenses, followed him after Buzz told him to leave him alone, then poked him with a bible which lead to Buzz defending himself.
💪
Proof: You would study at gunpoint
Just because you point a gun at me and make me sit for an hour or two in front of books, it doesn't mean I'll actually focus on the study material. All you'd be doing is making my ADHD thoughts gun-themed, ie how much getting shot might hurt, how guns work, the last time I went hunting with my dad, the Winchester House, whether or not I'd want to watch Full Metal Jacket, how to apply a tourniquet...
My immediate thought when I saw that was just. Great now you got a bunch of ADHD people wanting to info dump about guns to you because that is all they are going to think about. Like do they really think they can stop the train of intrusive thoughts from crashing into the station because they threatened me with a gun if so they severely underestimate an ADHD person's ability to do anything they are not interested in.
Absolutely this. 😂
I manage to distract myself without even TV or phone just loosing myself in my toughts a gun Will not stop me for doing that even with a book in front of me, I can memorise the content sure but it doesnt mean I will understand a thing just repeat like a parrot and forget everything the moment I take my exam.
@@Decarus37as a person with adhd I can confirm that I search up things I am not interested in
Me when a person with a gun to my head makes me think of the entire lyrics to Twenty One Pilots’ “Guns For Hands”, Green Day’s “21 Guns”, all the gun jokes associated in Jojo’s But Really Really Fast Series, some videos on Forgotten Weapons, the phrase “gunning for x”, gun safety rules, etc.
23:57 OH OH OH! Update on Murphy! He eventually was able to adopt a little eaglet that fell out of his nest and needed a new dad. He raised the eaglet who was released back into the wild. Good job, Murphy!
Best dad of the year, and it's a eagle
As a citizen of Chihuahua, Mexico I would love to clarify two things:
1) We get that confusion/ trolling with the dogs really often and
2) Watching The Click while living in Chihuahua makes you a furry.
idk where you get the furry part, he's never covered anything related to such a topic
As a click viewer I must ask what a ‘furry’ is. I’ve never seen click cover anything like that.
Furry? Like r/cutecats? What's a fnurry
- The click
@@a_lost_soul_forever(it’s a running joke to pretend he’s never covered anything furry related 😂)
@@a_lost_soul_foreverIt’s a running joke on this channel that The Click doesn’t know what furries are
As someone with ADHD I can confirm that not only is the disorder not real, but I’m not real either.
Okay so now that we’ve started this in the comments let me just-
I have ADHD and ADD and I’m bi and I’m ace and I’m non-binary and I’m autistic and I have an anxiety disorder.
As an aromantic with ADHD, I can also confirm I'm not real
Do I still have to pay taxes if I don't exist?
To God there is no zero
As another person with ADHD I can confirm that I’m just a figment of someone’s imagination
well my father way me meds way because he belive that i will become eretil dysfutional..... so i should't exist either
As someone with ADHD... No, I don't think a gun to my head would actually do anything besides making me even less capable due to the increased anxiety, honestly. It likely wouldn't help here that my adrenaline response isn't "fight" or "flight", it's "freeze".
Even if it would work, I would forget the bloody thing is there and get distacted in no time 😂
You've got that deer in headlights instinct.
And even if it worked, it doesnt mean anything to someone 's daily life. I mean, how much you can run while being chased by a murderer with an ax is not a good basis to determinate how much you should run in your daily exercise.
With the example of studying given: I my case I think it would probably work... for a while... then I would look like I'm studying (and actually not be able to recall the last few words I read, or even just "pretend" I'm reading... had A LOT of experience with that as a kid) for a while longer... until I would get too distracted, forget what is happening, and stop completely
My brain would either let me study because of external accountability or it would just say no because of hating to told what to do
"No natural alcohol" has never seen wild animals drunk off fermented fruit😂
My uncle Manolo is from Spain. He got stopped when going to the US and interrogated about where in South America he was from. He told them he was from Spain, he had his Spanish passport. ‘Where in South America is Spain?’ Asked the TSA people. He had to ask them to go get a world map because they wouldn’t believe Spain was in Europe. How do you get that job without knowing there are Spanish speaking people in places other than South America?
If it were any other country I'd doubt this story but America is... something different.
Americans are not very smart. It's pretty common for them to not understand that spain is a country. Apparently they don't know history either, otherwise they would have known about the invasion of the Spanish on the Mayans.
And who said intellegence was required for employment with TSA? Lol.
@@rockcat5000wouldn’t surprise me if they fired people who were found to be intelligent.
Although I live in Europe I work in an airport. this checks out 😂
"You would study at gunpoint"
Oh i would try, but theres no way thats working.
I'd die in, at most, 5 minutes
I don't have ADHD, but I would most definitely have some difficulties focusing on studying rather than the ffing gun
That was my response too
I have autism and with how often it gets emphasized how important education is it honestly felt like I had a gun to my head, and guess what all that causes is stress as you desperately try to fight against your brain
That's what I was thinking!
I can study just fine if I like the topic, but if you pointed a gun at me while I was studying my favorite subject, there is no way I'd be able to. What the everloving frick?
I want to ask this poster if they have tried to prove this theory by actually pointing a gun at someone to make them study, so that I could then report them to the police or fbi and get them put in jail if they admitted to doing so, lol.
"Well then being tired isn't real! If you were held at gunpoint, you wouldn't be tired anymore, right?"
Well technically you would soon be forced to sleep
@@dogouchu4356 with the fishes~
I'd still be tired. sure wired from fear and adrenalin as well... but "tired but wired" is a thing. nasty state of mind...
@@karowolkenschaufler7659 another nasty state of mind is getting your ritalin pill mixed up with your sleeping tablet. So adhd
Idk, adrenaline would wake me up for at least 15 mins.
Fun fact: The first vaccine used cowpox to prevent smallpox. Unfortunately this led to the Anti Vaccination Society and many people believed that the vaccine would give you cow-like characteristics such as udders or horns ( I had a history lesson on this yesterday and I'm very excited to share it 😂)
Yep. Stupidity is of a frighteningly ancient vintage...
@@wandererwerewolf477honestly people were probably less stupid back then on average. Ignorant maybe but that’s uneducated. Not stupid
I call those groups of people, The Regressives.
I'm kind of bummed I didn't get horns. That would be sweet, ngl.
They saw getting getting horns as a negative?!
"It's the same as 3×3"
That...that still doesn't equal 6, so that guys math was doubly wrong
I was looking for this comment, it needed to be said as Click was too furious about how 3x3 is the same as 3^3 to notice/mention
im so glad someone else noticed
@@lucylynn4579he confused it with 2*2 and 2^2, which both are 4.
It's like that math one that was in.. I want to say the previous video (could be 2 videos ago though), with the tweet poll that didn't have the correct answer as an option.
I'll honestly admit that I struggle with those, one of the subs that took over our math class may have taught us wrong 😅
when the person said 6 i was like haha okay
then they dropped ITS THE SAME AS 3x3 and I LAUGHED SO HARD HAHA
"If it's black a few times, then red is due. That is statistics." No, that's Gambler's Fallacy. Like, literally textbook.
Agreed, what they are looking for is the law of large numbers, which is completely different.
Or the thing might be rigged to favour black. 🕵
Unfortunately, Click missed pointing out something important there. He is correct, but there are other situations where this logic is completely justified, which means recognizing which you have is important. Specifically, any scenario where choices "use up" outcomes is affected by the previous choices.
Example: I have a bag in which there are three white balls and three black ones. If I put the balls in every time I pull one out and then draw three black balls that are returned to the bag, then the Gambler's Fallacy is incorrect. However, if every time a ball is removed it is thrown away, then if I withdrew three black balls and threw them away it most definitely does impact the color of the next ball.
You know the sad part? I understand this completely... unless I'm in Las Vegas 😅
@@davidnasset9147 You're right that there are situations where its more likely, but that's not what anyone was talking about. His example, and the conversation that lead to it, was referring to a situation where EVERY chance is 50/50.
The fallacy is just believing that one event occurs more frequently than expected when THE CHANCES ARE EQUAL then the chances of the alternate occuring is more likely. Your example is not equal past the first gamble, so it is not part of the fallacy, for or against it.
What you're describing is literally JUST statistics.
The fallacy is assuming statistics change for no reason, or simply reading statistics wrong.
Murphy the bald eagle has a great story. He was incubating a rock, but an eaglet was brought to the zoo after losing his family in a storm. The zookeepers switched him with Murphy's rock. Murphy raised him and he was released back into the wild when he was grown.😊
I love stories like this! Murphy just wanted to be a dad so much that he tried to incubate a rock, then the zookeepers helped him adopt a baby. 💖
I remember this!!! I thought it was brilliant!!!
that's adorable ❤
WE LOVE MURPHY HERE….
Omg, that’s so adorable.
The wine one cracked me up. My grandparents used to live in an area where a ton of wild trees grew little fruits on them, smaller than cherries. Towards the end of their fruiting season, they would begin to ferment. Wild birds would eat them and drunkenly crash into buildings on a regular basis.
Nah, the earth has never produced a single drop of alcohol.
There is a little documentation about animals getting drunk from eating very ripe/fermented fruits. i've seen it as a child a few times. Was my first thought when he read the post.
Bees will legit get evicted from the hive after coming home drunk from drinking flower nectar that ferments on hot days.
The Bertam plant's nectar has the highest alcohol content of any naturally occurring food and has the same potency as manmade beer. The tree shrews that live in the same area have livers of steel because they drink that nectar like its water.
At least they didn't talk shit about cannabis this time.
Remember kids, don't drink and fly!
The Chihuahua thing reminds me of that time someone said that 50% of gay people engage in *that kind* of child abuse, but the study they sent me said that 50% of gay people were victims of it as kids, saying nothing about the perpetuation of that abuse.
He whined about it until the discord server banned him lmao. Maybe next time he'll bother to read the abstract.
There are legit some people who believe there's a 1:1 relationship between having been abused, and abusing others. I think that also contributes to the spread of misinformation about queer people allegedly being dangerous.
@@thou_dog It absolutely does.
It sucks, because it makes me paranoid that someone's gonna off me like that woman in California who hung a pride flag in her store window. :(
A certain demagogue was quick to wash his hands of responsibility, though, despite spreading the rhetoric that people like me are somehow dangerous. :/
@@DopaminedotSeek3rcolonthree also Ms Raichik of LoTT, who I thought of immediately when I heard the news about that poor lady.
@@DopaminedotSeek3rcolonthree I live a few short miles from that store, & our community was shocked & disgusted that she was killed for a flag.
@@DrachenGothik666 I'm sorry for your loss. I can't imagine how rattling it must have been to the whole community.
"Paint didn't exist in ancient times." Not only is that false, of course, but the assertion is moot anyway. The pyramids were originally covered in LIMESTONE. Paint was not needed.
Hell, if the pyramids were painted white, they might actually have possibly had a point, since maintaining a painted surface on that large of a structure would have likely been an absolute nightmare, especially with the paints they had at the time. But yeah, Tura limestone is already white, no paint needed.
@@lorscarbonferrite6964 they did have a point it was gold but as you can imagine over the years that was taken
@@anitacrumbly gold paint, or gold.
@@anitacrumbly I think you misinterpreted my comment. When I said "they might have had a point", I wasn't referring to the pyramids, but rather the original confidently incorrect commenter in the video. I can see where my comment might have given you the wrong impression though; the wording is fairly ambiguous.
Bingo.
Also, the images carve *and painted* inside the pyramids aren't exactly a secret either.
The lady talking about ADHD didn't hear about neurodivigent people who want to do something so bad they convulse inside but they still can't stand up.
In addition, those of us who take twice as long to do certain tasks, so we have to figure out if we have the time and energy to do something productive.
Oh god, the paralysis is so bad. I want to do something, I need to do it, and I'm staring at it, knowing it's super easy, and I STILL CAN'T DO IT. It can be anything, from going to the bathroom, to getting a drink, to starting that one email, or getting dressed. Like, I NEED to go to the bathroom and for some reason I can't make myself stand up and do it until it's really really pressing.
@@AnnekeOosterink And even if you fight it somehow and start to do any task in your head you are still in this state so you start to loop inside of the head about next steps making you go sit back again and paralize even stronger xD
Daily dose of frustration, that you can't even take out because you're paralized xD
I already told my family not so long ago that I'm frustrated or angry all the time but I hide 80% of it bc I would be rude at all times and I don't want to be this person xDD
Ahhhh!!! My ADHD paralysis is so bad! I really need to do my history
I hate that feeling so much...
The Korean one was so hilarious. The realization and him going "we're SCUMBAGS!"
Props to him for not doubling down like some podcast bros would. He took the L, processed it, and arrived at the correct conclusion in seconds. Respect.
"With sticks!" -- The ancient Greeks figured out the Earth was round because the Earth's shadow on the moon during a lunar eclipse is always round, and the only shape that casts a round shadow from all angles is a globe. Eratosthenes's experiment with the sticks measured the radius of the Earth, and he was within a few percent.
Wait could you explain this more simply
@@flamefangstar A lunar eclipse is when the sun casts the Earth’s shadow on the moon - and because the shadow is a circle (and the only shape that can cast a circle from any angle is a sphere) then that means the earth is round
@@fordalels OHHHH
The one about Chihuahua… I’m reminded of during the 2020 US election where they claimed that the state of Georgia had more votes than their population… and showed the population of the country of Georgia.
Yeah that was hilarious!
lmao
Anything to twist things to fit their delusions.
My boyrfriend sent me one of those "I'm just asking questions" conspiracy things, where the guy said "The ISS has been orbiting for 20 years, there have been around 100 eclipses over that time, so why haven't they taken any photos of an eclipse from the ISS? Really makes you think..." the other day.
As an avid Kerbal Space Program fan I was like "ooo I know this one!" and started talking about how the inclination of the ISS's orbit and the Moons orbit are completely different, so the chances of the ISS crossing the path of an active eclipse isn't actually that great, and that the speed of the ISS would give them about a 30 second window before passing out of the shadow of the eclipse, I ended with "But to answer their key question, here's a link to a photo of an eclipse taken from on board the ISS last October."
Wait O_O there is one? I'll go check it out. But yeah one time a flat earther was trying to convince me that gravity doesn't exist and it's only a matter a density and buoyancy. I was like >_> "Bro, how do you think those 2 things happen."
"The chances of the ISS crossing the path of an active eclipse isn't actually that great ... but here's a link to a photo of an eclipse from the ISS"
Honestly love that. Not only explains why photos of an eclipse from the ISS are unlikely to be taken, but still provides proof that it's possible _and has happened recently._ Just completely explains it in pretty easy to understand terms and shuts down their entire argument. If only they would realize their mistake after getting it explained to them, but you know if you actually tried they'd just respond with "nuh-uh, do your research." lol.
How did your boyfriend react to that answer?
@@tunasci Fine actually, he really enjoys the stories of conspiracy theories but doesn't actually believe them, and he knows I enjoy crapping on them so he sends me stuff he thinks will set me off :D
@@Whitewingdevil A great dynamic for a healthy relationship 😊
As someone with ADHD 32:42 , I would still have a hard time studying even with a gun to my head unless it's formatted right or a good topic.
as an adhd'er, if someone held a gun to my head and said "study or i'll shoot you", i would stare at a book and cry.
I have ADD and my dad said "If your apartment building was on fire you'd get out of there real quick". The fact I had to think about it should tell you everything you need to know. Sure, if I have a plane to catch or some other extremely important thing that has severe consequences if I miss it I'll usually make it in time. But it's extremely exhausting and it doesn't extend to every day situations. It would be impractical to set my apartment on fire every day to get out of the house, for instance.
The adrenalin kick that gets us moving in an emergency doesn't hesitate to present its bill afterwards. I have a fatigue disorder and yes, I could leap out of bed pretty quick if the house were on fire - but I'd probably faint as soon as I reached safety.
Not exactly the same, but i have adhd. One time, a room in my house lit on fire (here's it's called the lavadero, basically a room in your backyard where the washing machine goes, unsure of the english name). I was the first to notice. You know what i did? Nothing, i froze. Only later did i kick into gear, but it took a while. So, there you go, proof that your house being on fire wouldn't necessarily make you do anything faster lol.
Ps: my house was fine afterwards
@@denjidenji9162 There's also the fight/flight/freeze reflex. Right back from our earliest mammal ancestors hiding in the undergrowth hoping the big dinosaur wouldn't see them and eat them, one of our reactions to something life-threateningly dangerous has been to freeze. You'll see it most often in people who have been assaulted, and people who weren't there ask "Why didn't she scream? Why didn't she try to fight?" and the reason why she didn't scream or fight was because her whole body was literally paralysed by fear. It's not a choice, it's built in and completely outside our control.
Yeah, I'm fairly confident I wouldn't be running very fast even if there was a fire,
Especially since I've had to reset the alarm so many times
I am almost completely unbothered by it nowadays.
People with adhd actually are shown to perform better in emergency situations than others. We are more focused and calm. I’m pretty sure any person would move quick of there was a fire in their house. I’m not sure how that correlates daily life. Even people who are on time and always in a hurry most likely move quicker when the house is on fire then on a normal day 😂
40:40
"The dice don't know what the dice did last time. Every game starts from scratch."
-Donna Noble, Doctor Who
Let’s goooooo Doctor Who reference! 🥳
@@abigailr.9601 Yaayy!🥳
If either of you are craving more Doctor Who while waiting for the new Doctor’s run, check out the Big Finish audio dramas, they're brilliant.
The worst part about this is that I've seen people say that this invalidates unlikely things being unlikely for example the chance of flipping a coin and it being heads 100 times in a row is very low but I've seen people say that "No it's still a 50% chance" I like to call this "The reverse gambler's fallacy".
@@kakahass8845 Yep, I mean technically if you're counting only the beginning of every flip, yeah, 50% all the way through, but in general? Somewhere in the hundreds of thousands percentile, maybe even millionths of a percent of a chance.
The gambling one reminds me of the guy who so confidently tried to tell me that my chances of being trans are 1/1000 and so are my child's, so the chances of us both being trans are 0.000009%. We're both trans. He said it as a way to get me to "reconsider" being trans. Like, dude, we're already trans! That's not how statistics work! Even if his numbers were correct, which they are not.
Love when people pull numbers out of their asses
@@Voidi-Voidand misunderstand probability.
Whenever I feel dumb, I always remind myself that there is a country in which the 1/3 pound burger failed because people thought it'd be smaller than the 1/4 pound burger. You'll never guess what country that was.
Hmm…. Germany? Switzerland? It definitely isn’t the USA or UK that’s for sure.
It’s America lol
Yeah, the one where I live…
I'm sure we all got it 1st guess
🇱🇷
23:52 fun fact about Murphy, later on that year a bald eagle nest fell out of a tree, and by miracle one of the eggs survived. They brought them back to the zoo and gave Murphy his chance at father hood, which he succeeded at greatly. A couple years later the chick was released into the wild, and it was given the name rocky
Okay, that name was perfect.
That is absolutely awesome, thank you! 🤗
It's quite possible that his paternal instincts will be re-activated in the future and he'll incubate another rock (or if the chance presents itself another chick).
23:48 IMPORTANT UPDATE: Murphy's determination to incubate rocks was such that the zookeepers gave him an actual egg to help raise alongside a lady eagle named Shannon, and they are now proud parents together! Murphy continues to preen the young eaglet and tend to it as it grows.
IMPORTANT UPDATE 2: Despite being disabled and unable to fly, Murphy was able to teach the eaglet, named Rocky, how to fly. Rocky's mom, Shannon, is partially blind and non-releasable, as is Murphy. Rocky, however, was able to be released into the wild to go contribute to eagle conservation efforts. Murphy and Shannon, though they haven't mated, continue to be good friends and spend time with each other frequently, including napping beside each other and sharing meals.
That's so awesome 😊
Thanks for the comment. I am happy for Murphy! :)
@@LordHorstIt gets better! Rocky, the eaglet, has learned to fly and was able to be released into the wild. Although Murphy is disabled and can't fly himself, he and Rocky's mom Shannon were able to demonstrate enough of the wing positions for Rocky to learn and be able to fly as he matured.
@@noth1ng5idSecond update: the eaglet, named Rocky, has been able to learn to fly and has been released into the wild. Murphy and Shannon, Rocky's mom, remain close friends. Although both eagles are disabled, they were able to teach Rocky to fly regardless, and now he's been able to return to their ancestral forests.
The ADHD one reminds me of "we're all a little Autistic" and "depression is just being sad". Wow, almost like whether something is classified as a disorder is majorly dependent on if it inhibits your daily life and people can share traits but not qualify for diagnosis because their symptoms are manageable(which doesn't discard that you can still use advice and strategies designed for people with the diagnosis, no matter whether you have it, don't, or aren't sure!).
We really need to start specifying what is meant by "normal" when so many diagnostic criteria are "experieces this thing more/less than normal"
Shaming people in the gym is ridiculous... As a fitness coach, I may see people that look like they're not doing an exercise right, but unless they're doing something really dangerous that may hurt them, I never interfere. Because it's none of my business. Because I don't really know what they're working on, it may be something completely different. Actually, anyone who shames people like this is very unprofessional and has no business critiquing others.
Right? Or maybe they have a different need and have had to adjust the exercise to accommodate their differences in ability or whatever.
So long as they aren't gonna hurt themselves, who cares?
Honestly, the fear of people making fun of me is one of the reasons I don't go to the gym (aside from the cost). I have to rebuild so much muscle mass after I become disabled and I can lift so little and only do exercises in short bursts. Having a place with all the equipment already is ideal, but I worry people will mock my lack of skills or be creepy because I'm a woman.
@@fallenking578 I have trouble processing things at the time they happen and get overwhelmed so I agree but if I could process faster I'd simply tell them to mind their own business because I genuinely don't care about their opinion. Not sure how they'd react to that but I'm told when I talk to assholes I get super polite...
@@GeekGamer666 I can understand that. I usually don't know how to respond in the moment when people are jerks and end up getting afraid
Pretty much as long as the gym goers aren't dropping the weights & aren't being jerks or monkeying around, I tend to assume they're fine on their own. As an introvert, I keep to myself anyways, so let the staff & other people deal with the very few times I've seen people be a "lunk" at the gym. Lol, usually I'm looking at the TVs unless crow brain sees shiny things &/or major movement in my peripheral, so no idea if there's really that much going on at my gym, honestly. Seems pretty chill, but those kinds of videos make me a little uncomfortable with the possibility of ending up in the background like that anyways. Let's just hope that if it happens, it's when I'm a bit more toned up & my RBF fits whatever the context of the clip is. 😄
I think that flat earther gave the game away when he said "they want us to believe we are on a ball with little purpose".
Because, looking at a lot of them, it all comes down to a fear of insignificance. If it was literally random chance that human life came to be-- luck of chemicals and energy forming life on this planet, that means theres no greater plan, there's no inherent meaning to it all, and thats terrifying to them.
They need to believe an extrenal force gave them significance and worth, instead of finding it in their own lives, even if its scary.
It always seemed to me that having the sole purpose of being there to worship what created me was pretty pointless in and of itself anyway. Eventually I realized that all the bears, chickadees, macaques, guppies and so on didn't worry about that, and they got along just fine. And if the universe seems terrifyingly huge, well, it always was there doing what it's still doing so why not let it get on with things and I'll sit here with the cat? Things got simpler after that. Well, a little simpler.
Except I have a lot more cats.
I always wonder how flat earthers explain why we fly eastwards to Asia from Europe but from the westcoast of the Americas, it is westwards. Doesn't make sense to me if the earth is flat. Or will the say that the GPS tracker you see on your flight is just a big lie to fool you into thinking you fly westward or eastward?
@@Fluffy-Fluffy been there argued that, they believe in... and I shit you not, the Pac-Man effect. Basically you just pop out the other side of the flat map.
@@pagedmaj
Pac-Man effect? Almost like there's a known shape that doesn't have an edge and if you travel in a straight line you're bound to return to your starting point.
So, they'll literally make up anything to just not come to terms with the fact that the earth is spherical. Lol
@@im_aleey at least it's an explanation, at one point I tried debunking one of them and their argument was literally "why can't I believe what I want". 💀
The real ADHD was the friends we imagined along the way
Amen
Or maybe it was just the schizophrenia.
It could have been that.
@sheersternfeld1914 the voices *say* they're real so I dunno about that
And the projects we dropped, because phone rang.
aDhD iSnT rEaL
"Proof, YOU WOULD STUDY AT GUNPOINT"
My ADHD ass: Oh thank god you're gonna shoot me. For a second there I thought I might actually have to study
Me fr
Jokes on you! My executive dysfunction much stronger than my sense of self preservation!
I’d do anything to get out of studying. ..
If a gun was pointed at my head while I had to study, my focus would be even worse than usual, because THERE IS A GUN TO MY HEAD!
Lol the people who don't think paint existed in ancient times literally forgot about cave _paintings_
Paint is just a stain with a purpose
Right?
Wasn't there paintings of hypoglyphs on the walls inside the pyramids too?
And markings, and tattoos.
also face paint and makeup
I gave my 9-year-old brother the "sawing the board" question, and he answered correctly on the first try. How can adults, let alone a teacher, get it wrong? And act so confident on top of that?
Well, to be completely fair, if you grab a square plank and take 10 minutes to saw it in half, if you grab one of the halves and cut it in half to make two squares again, due to being half as long it would take half as much time. But the fact that the teacher didn't specify anything in this hypothetic case means no answer is truly correct, nor is it wrong
I think this question is a brilliant example of an equasion that was simply disguised as a text question. It is entirely removed from the real world, they simply took a random example and filled the blanks with the premade numbers, in this case, I assume, to make a child solve for x=5.
The question would have worked with cutting a specific shape out of a board, or filling a bucket of water, or whatever.
I struggled a lot with math, in part due to bullshit like this.
It took me ages to even understand how you could possibly get the wrong answer (15) as an answer for that. The concept of it taking 5 minutes to cut the board into 1 is so mind boggling it didn't even occur to me 😂
@@kristophesiem5336 I was thrown by your explanation until I changed the perspective to 1/2 as "wide" & factor-in that it really wouldn't qualify as a plank. Once I got the idea of it, though, that's a really out-of-the-box cool take on the problem!
Education in America is the honest answer.
honestly if the earth was flat disney would've built a theme park to the edge already with the tagline "jump off the edge of the world!" like in the fifties
And you know ppl would do it too *looks at myself* 💀
it wouldve been shut down in the 80s due to people dying and it wouldve made it into a 'top 10 abandoned themeparks/attractions' video by be amazed
I think if the Earth was really flat scientists would be all over that damned ice wall, drilling it and x-raying it and whatnot, not hiding it! RUclips would be full of videos of sunburned to a crisp polar scientists showing us what they are doing with the wall today!!!
Yeah, 8:20 gave me the same feelings as when I'm playing a Bethesda game and instead of just neatly falling over, the enemy I've just killed catapults up into the atmosphere while writhing wildly, never to be seen again. I was ALMOST very mad at the racism, but then it was all instantly overwritten with a Niagara Falls worth of Utter Confusion.
AND THE GAMBLING ONE. Oh god. There's a phrase I saw in a book once that's stuck with me ever since; 'The dice have no memory'. I urge people thinking about gambling to also remember this phrase.
If you want a gamble device with memory, get a deck of cards and don't shuffle your draws back into it until you run oit of cards to draw.
As someone with ADHD, I can confirm that we don’t exist, we are just a figment of your imagination
I KNEW IT
Oh damn, I had physical art things to paint. How can I finish my projects if I'm imaginary?
that's why we're so good at drawing... From imagination :3
My imagination is creating people?!?!?! I am GOD!!!!! Not a particular good god, but live long and prosper my ADHD creations!
If you can see this, you are hallucinating and therefore you must have schizophrenia
Without getting into anything scientific, a major problem with flat earth is that EVERY single government worldwide would have to agree to keep this secret
Finally, Russia and the USA work together so peacefully
Exactly. And WHY would they want to hide it? You can't believe all humans working even slightly within the field are a hivemind controlled by the devil, OOOooooOoo 👻
Even if it was real, this would only confound the problem because of the simple question of "what force on Earth could convince this many people with this many different viewpoints on how to run things to actually agree on that this should kept secret from anyone? *_What_* is out there?"
Exactly. People really think that the Israeli and Lebanese governments would be secretly collaborating? Or the Russian and Ukrainian ones? Lol
North Korea could troll us so hard.
A cool thing about bismuth: it’s a metal. It naturally curls. You can melt it but when it dries and if it isn’t in a mold, it will naturally go back to its curly form
technically it freezes
drying means the removal of a solvent, usually water
@@Blatt1247 yeah sry English isn’t my mother language and the perfect word for it in my language doesn’t have an English word
you explained it well! I love bismuth and its blocky, curly form :3
@@Bucketnetta The word "solidify" is the most commonly used when referring to a liquid metal becoming a solid metal - while "freeze" _is_ more accurate than "dry", I will warn that people will look at you weird if you use "freeze" _or_ "dry" when talking about phase changes in metals when speaking/writing in English.
@@rosesapling72 bismuth is so pretty i love the crystals especially when they're on an object made out of bismuth:3
45:10 I will never forget when I was in 7th grade, my math teacher gave us a quiz on algebra after she had taught us how we might go about solving it. She taught us a specific way of writing it out in order to break down the problem which is totally fine and does get the right answer when done correctly. I always did very well with these problems when practicing them in class, always getting the right answer.
And yet, when she handed out the graded quizzes, I had received a 2 (my school system had switched to standards-based grading so the best score was a 4 and 2 was basically a low D). All my answers were identical to those who got a 4 and so were the steps I took to get the answer.
Why did I get such a low grade on the quiz? Well, it was because I wrote out my process differently than she had taught us to write it. Rather than using her method which was similar to balancing a scale, I had written my work to be a straight line taking it step by step-a method that made much more sense to me and my AuDHD brain.
I want to emphasize that every step I took in solving the equation was the same as what she had taught us, just written out differently. The teacher had also NOT specified that we were supposed to use her exact method of writing out our process before or during the quiz. She had only told me this AFTER I asked her why I had gotten a 2 if all of my answers and work were correct.
I was forced to retake the quiz and received a 4 (A+) when the only thing I did differently waS THE WAY I WROTE OUT MY FORKING WORK! YES IM STILL VERY UPSET ABOUT THAT! SCREW YOU MS. HARRINGTON!
Oh man, it was like a question I got when applying for Securitas security company. The question was "Have you ever had a problem with teenage theft". I said yes. The hiring manager wouldn't hire me, because he said me saying yes to that meant I was a thief when I was a teenager. I said no, me saying yes to that means that I've been a security guard for 5 years and have had a problem with teenagers stealing from the stores I was guarding.
XD
Yeah that was a poorly worded question. Should have told him you didn't have a problem with teenage theft, you were quite good at it ;3
@@capthavic lol
24:00 Murphys story is kind of wholesome. he has broken wing so he cant fly and is the reason why he is kept there, and at some point he started to incubate a "egg" that turned out to be a rock. after some time he go to rise a orphan eagle as his own that he raised successfully :)
Single father of the year?🤔❤️🦅
"THEY FIGURED THIS OUT THOUSANDS OF YEARS AGO!
WITH *STICKS* !"
Love u Clicky
*Monkey blood part:* Here is a quote from Wikipedia from the "Rh blood group system" article ("History" section):
The term "Rh" was originally an abbreviation of "Rhesus factor". It was discovered in 1939 by Karl Landsteiner and Alexander S. Wiener, who, at the time, believed it to be a similar antigen found in rhesus macaque red blood cells. It was subsequently discovered that the human factor is not identical to the rhesus monkey factor, but by then, "Rhesus Group" and like terms were already in widespread, worldwide use.
It'd be even funnier to imagine that the person that said "South Africa ain't a country that's a direction" happens to live in South Carolina.
or West Virginia or the Dakotas
Fun fact! Murphy is now a foster dad!!! He's the proud parent of an abandoned eaglet!
YAY!!
That is clearly a lie to cover up that he in fact incubated that rock and now they don't want to admit that he actually did it.
Sooooo cute!!!!
Thank you for my daily dose of wholesomeness 🥰
@@Hellbughunter So proud of Murphy for successfully hatching the first Rock-Eagle egg!
16:15 Hebrew speaker here- the pronounciation of NASA in hebrew has several meanings, but NONE of them are to lie / decieve.
It is the past tense of to Drive, Carry, Bring with and to flee (for female subjects)...
I wanna nasa (flee) to space
@@confusedaf1112 Also all of these words are in third person singular past, and except for flee (which is feminine) they have ultimate accent, while the NASA acronym is in penult accent...
If you REALLY want to learn Hebrew, I can recommend the youtube channel "Aleph with Beth", which will tell you that "nasá" also means "marry"...
So… schlep?
I love the tangent of just going through his rock collection. ADHD goals.
That guy talking about how alcohol is a man made thing is even more wrong lol. Alcohol exists in nature, i watched a documentary on elephants and they were following this herd that migrates to a body of water every year (or few years, cant remember which) and they talked about how on the way they'd stop at these fruit trees and would purposefully eat the fruit that had fallen and fermented on the ground instead of just picking good and ripe fruit from the trees. They also showed other animals that also migrated there doing this too, it was funny watching them kinda stumbling around 🤣 So yes, animals also enjoy getting drunk just as much as humans!
(This doesnt mean that you should give your pets alcohol though. If you do, you need to make sure its something safe for them to consume and only give them a TINY bit, even if theyre big like a mastiff or something)
We accidentally got the cat drunk one Thanksgiving when busy playing card games and not watching our glasses of spiked eggnog. We know better now.
Though it's rare, humans can also develop "Auto-brewery Syndrome" where the body converts some carbohydrates into alcohol, giving you the same sensations as drinking.
True, heard stories about drunk elephants causing chaos from a school teacher who was from South Africa.
And the Bible literally says to get wasted and high (yes, it says both) for one festival.
Wine is mentioned A LOT.
Some flowers that have larger-than-normal nectar repositories can have the nectar ferment. Seeing a whole lot of drunk bees staggering in circles on the grass under a flowering tree is .. memorable.
I don't know if bees get drunk deliberately, but the alcohol is certainly a natural phenomenon and the bees don't avoid it.
ADHD isnt real? Alright then.
*Fades out of existence*
Man i wish
That would be great tho
*Fades out of existence along with you*
*A-*
Fuc---==_~
Scientifically speaking, if the earth WAS flat, there would be no sun/moon, no gravity, and everything would be pulled to the middle, unable to move. Even if you somehow did reach the edge, you wouldn’t fall down, you would fall sideways.
what force is pulling in the middle?
and wouldn't such a disc collapse into a sphere under that force over time?
@@Blatt1247Yes gravity would crush it into a sphere but gravity is strongest in the middle (I'm not exactly sure why) so walking to the sides would feel like climbing an increasingly steeper hill Artifexian made a good video talking about how a flat world might work if it was possible.
@kakahass8845 The original commentor said "no gravity". The original reply mentioned that in the form of a question, noting the inaccuracy of the original thought experiment. They likely knew gravity would pull you towards the center of mass already.
@@kakahass8845Also, gravity is the strongest at "the center of mass of a system" (not always in the center of a celestial body) becuase that would be the lowest potential energy well in Space-Time.
@@Blatt1247 that depends on the material the sphere is made from. If it is made from impossiblum, it could potentially resist gravity's force and remain a disk forever. In which case flat earth would indeed work gravitationally as described ...
Love the comment about how showing your working helps show where you get muddled in maths - teachers could never understand why my working would be correct, but somewhere a would become a 9, or a 4 would become a 7 and my answer would be wrong. We're pretty sure I have dyscalculia (along with ADHD not diagnosed until I was in my 30s), because I struggle if asked a question out loud to remember that 4+7 and 7+4 are the same sum.
None of my teachers noticed or considered that I could really be struggling with maths, and especially mental arithmetic, because I went to a school you needed to pass an exam to get into. So instead, I got put in what one teacher referred to as "the thicky set" for maths, where my teacher would routinely yell at me for "not trying". When in chemistry, we got to the quantitative stuff, and I told my teacher my homework was late because I was struggling with the numbers and wanted to get it right, she slammed her hand into the wall next to me and roared "well you must be stupid then!"
It's been fun, getting my diagnosis of ADHD and realising that every single time I was made to feel like my inability to do something was a moral failure, it was ingraining deep self-hatred and maladaptive coping mechanisms that it's going to take me decades to unlearn.
The goofy post about Chihuahua's killing children actually made me look up how often children are killed by small dogs, I couldn't find anything. I don't think it's completely impossible for a smaller dog to kill someone though, a bad bite can easily get infected no matter how big the dog it came from.
Yeah, absolutely. I would not leave a young child with a dog of any size unsupervised. Dog, or indeed any animal, bites are no joke.
There was an old lady killed by a pack of dachshunds in Oklahoma. I remember seeing it on the news awhile ago but it’s been too long to remember the details.
Thank you so much for looking this up because I was so curious! 😂
Yep, I know someone who survived an infected dog bite, and he doesn't have any fingers and had to have both legs amputated below the knee because of sepsis
@@CaliSaint Dachshunds were bred for hunting badgers. The name literally means badger dog in German.
If ADHD isn't real then my primary doctor, my therapist, group home supervisor, and the university research panel that diagnosed me have a LOT of explaining to do.
They're not real either. 😉
Being real is soooo 10000000 years ago, l ol
but big pharma ..............
22:12 completely missed that this person not only thinks 3^3 is the same as 3x3, but also thinks that 3x3=6
2+2 = 2x2 = 2^2? Must apply to 3
@@hashbird22 /srs or /j
Right! Totally caught me off guard. I was like "ok let me see how they came to this conclusion" and they pulled out "it's 3 x 3"!
I hoped someone else would notice this!
Pippi Longstocking maths. ;)
With the whole Gambling = buying a used car that was in a wreck analogy, the person who used the analogy has a point, but it would probably be *more* likely to crash, not because of the person driving, but because minor damage that didn't need to be repaired at the time of the accident getting worse and potentially leading to bad consequences if left unchecked by the new owner.
As someone who lives in South Africa, and has ADHD and autism, South Africa is a country and ADHD and autism are, in fact separate things
Poor you, how does it feel to discover that your country doesn't exist and adhd and autism don't exist... Your whole life was a lie 😮 /s
Hey click, I'm sorry but you were confidently incorrect about the viking sunstone, that is selenite, it is effectively natural fiberoptics, so it does have an optical quality, however what you need for a viking Sunstone is optical grade calcite, the optical quality it has is called birefringence, this allows it to split light into 2 rays instead of 1, you look through it at the sky and its partially covered to form a slit of light, when the stone is properly oriented toward the source of light (even behind clouds or under the horizon) the 2 slits you see will be the same brightness.
@@moon-moth1 I'm just a pagan jewler and survivalist lol tho my grandfather was a geologist lol
I've used a sunstone to navigate at sea before for the lulz
You also need a twilight board and shadow stick tho to me entirely honest it's been ages and idk if I could still use one without some practice
That's pretty cool.
I work at a metaphysical shop and almost commented but you got it before me 🙂
@@Creativelife1031 noice, I have always wanted to work at one of my local ones but they are never hiring lol that and dispensaries seem like great places to work lol you know the kinds if place where they wont get mad when you ask for time off to restore a river ecosystem// will let you put up petitions to reintroduce a local species lol
So what is Moonstone? We've got a beach here that has so much of the stuff (in little bitty pieces) that it's literally named Moonstone Beach.
Sorry slight rant: As someone who is pretty allergic to milk I have run into MANY people surprised I can eat eggs and I have explained MORE times than I would like to say that eggs are in fact NOT dairy. "But they both come from an animal" they say which I reply "so does meat but at least you know THATS not dairy"
And yes I know that when someone is allergic to one more than likely they are allergic to the other but COME ON why would eggs be considered dairy in any sense of the word?
Seriously? I was under the impression everyone knew eggs are NOT Dairy.
Perhaps it''s because some people could have conflated the "dairy" label with the mix of animal-derived products that differentiate vegan and vegetarian diets, which would include both milk *_and_* eggs. 🤷♂
Probably cos, at least here in the US, dairy and eggs are kept side by side in the same cold case at the store.
Because they are in the dairy section in the supermarket, du-uuuh.
My theory was that both eggshells and milk have calcium. But the others are probably right, it's the vegan / vegetarian thing.
Fun fact about bismuth: they are diamagnetic, which means they repel each other in the same way magnets do. You could theoretically use this by placing two flat circles of bismuth perfectly on top of each other, making the top one float!
😃😃😃😃😃😃
I’m hoping someone has made a video of that. If they haven’t, they should.
It’s not that they’re repelled by each other; they’re repelled by a magnetic field. You can float a chunk of bismuth over strong enough magnet. If you’ve seen two pieces of bismuth repel each other it’s probably because they were in a strong magnetic field. There’s a video on the channel NightHawkInLight in which he makes a stand out of 2 bismuth crystals and suspends a magnet between them.
Also, remember that diamagnetic and paramagnetic effects are much weaker than ferromagnetic effects, so you'll need a really strong magnet.
If you look more into Murphy's story it turns cute. A baby eagle got rejected by it's parents so Murphy was allowed to adopt it. Since he was already trying to have a kid the zoo keepers decided to let him adopt
Okay that is adorable ❤
> "3³=6"
> "It's the same as 3x3"
Who's gonna tell them 3x3 isn't 6 either?
Isn’t 3 cubed 3x3x3? 3 squared is 3x3, which you’re right, isn’t 6 either XD
someone that they will refuse to listen to, that is who
24:02 that's kinda sad, because some of Australia's most recognizable birds, cassowaries and emus, both have the dad exclusively taking care of the eggs and chicks. The mother's job is done after laying the eggs. So they don't even know about the animals on their own continent.
Also that bird sanctuary with the eagle is in America.
There’s this great bit in Futurama where the professor is arguing with this ape guy who says evolution is a myth.
The professor keeps naming different ancestors and the ape guy keeps saying “well where is the link between those ones?” The fast forward until they have like 30 connections and when he can’t answer one he goes “you see you can’t prove it!”
Unfortunately it feels like some people actually think like this. It doesn’t matter how many connections you have. If you are missing one then it’s all just guess work and you can’t prove anything.
22:52 As a space nerd I am internally and externally screaming. 1 It’s being commercialised *as we SPEAK!* 2 We are quite literally going back *NEXT YEAR!*
Heck, we already have gone back (with unmanned landers)!
That and we HAVE returned to the Moon. 12 people have landed on it, not just 2 and their module pilot's stayed in orbit.
@@rolfs2165 We have returned with human beings.
Armstrong/Aldrin
Conrad/Bean
Shepherd/Mitchell
Scott/Irwin - 1st time Lunar Rover vehicle driven on the moon
Young/Duke
Cernan/Schmitt - 3 days and 3 moonwalks.
@@hoshireed77 With "return" most people mean "after the Apollo program ended". Armstrong and Aldrin in particular didn't "return", they were the first to set foot on the moon.
Unless you believe that a prehistoric lunar civilisation fled to Earth after turning the Moon into a lifeless rock …
@@rolfs2165 also it would be hollow in that case because why not
Click: "Let me show you rock collection when you can't escape"
Me (who loves rocks): I wasn't going anywhere!
10/10 want to see more of click's rocks
Do you know what the Viking navigation stone is? I initially thought it was celestine, but then I thought maybe it's quartz... I'd love to know!
I was doing some chores and talking about rocks, Click got all my attention. I really didn't believe he would show us his favorite.😍🥰
@@ebbenazor7857
Credit to @constantChaos1 the rock is selenite but what you need for and Sunstone is optical grade calcite
@@ebbenazor7857 i think its selenite.
People with ADHD can study, its about how the brain focuses on and retains whats being studied. Nobody's saying they foam at the mouth and black out if they crack a text book
Legit the need to take a 10 minute break every 5 minutes is real
I don't do school anymore but when I did my attention span for actually studying sucked.
When I was of school age I used to "waste" time doing my hobbies all day just to wake up at 5am and do what my friends spent the whole previous day studying. It was a sort of sprint study that let me remember all the things I needed to learn for the day. My grades were better than others and I still remember most of those informations years later.
If I tried studying at normal times like my friends did I would just get frustrated and not study anything the whole day, compared to me knowing I had to be in school in less than 4hours transformed me into a fast learning machine for those hours. That's ADHD for you lol
I literally did my homework at 2:30AM today after week of burnout from school, lol... I'm back on track, I guess
@@Daesma999 you're doing great, take care of yourself
Tbh I'm pretty sure having a gun pointed at me would destroy my ability to study, and I don't have ADHD. Nothing about that argument made sense.
Oh that wonderful combination when your ADHD and your old friend depression are both having a sleepover in your head and not even a pewpew to your head could convince you to get out of bed to study (or clean, or eat). Good times 😐
39:42 If you stand directly on the equator, your compass explodes
18:04 This is the argument I used against a "we didn't go to the moon" conspiracy theoriest. I told him put all the science aside, how many people would have to agree to cooperate to pull that kind of thing into effect. People agross different classes, countries, political leanings, religions, so on and so forth. All these people would not only have to agree to it but then successfully pull it off. He chose to ignore that argument and instead insult my intelligence and bring up how well he understood the science. I still get pissed off just thinking of him and/or that conversation.
You just can't win with these people!
It's like playing chess against a pigeon:
no matter what brilliant moves you do to corner them, they'll knock over all the pieces, shit on the board and swagger around like they won.
Why haven't we returned to the moon? Funding. Coin. The public purse. 🪙
Unfortunately all that money redirected from NASA and the NSF is going to many of the same government contractors to build things that destroy themselves and take people's lives and homes and communities with them. Genocide toys. 🚀→💣
Instead of towards the science the people need to have some actual quality of life: housing, healthcare, a habitable planet etc. 🌏
There's a quote that fits these people to a tee (Cannot remember where it comes from): "The very powerful and the very stupid have one thing in common: They don't alter their views to fit the facts, they alter the facts to fit their views."
@@DirgeTVThe 4th Doctor said that.
Followed by, "Which can be very uncomfortable if you happen to be one of the facts that needs altering."
I use that quote often in reference to being LGBT+: Our existence is a fact that doesn't fit the Views of the religionists. So they try to "alter us" out of existence.
The thing about the roulette table is called probablity/randomness bias. When digital playlists first introduced shuffle/random options, people complained when the 2 consecutive songs were played in order because they thought it couldn't be random. So the shuffle feature was changed so this can't happen, thus making it less random to feel more random.
It's also called the gambler's fallacy, which is quite fitting in this case 😁
I believe there were different algorithms: each time a new song was played, it was chosen at random (with replacement) and then changed to the whole playlist be randomly generated from the possible songs (without replacement) then played through.
Both are still random
@@jacquimott386Yes, and I think that's what the problem was. The Use-Case said, "Play the playlist in a random order," but the software developer heard, "Randomly pick something from the playlist each time and play that." The user wanted: "Shuffle my playlist," the programmer went, "Got it - use a random number generator to pick the next song." The two are not the same.
Of course, most people, when faced with a shuffled list of, "2, 1, 4, 5, 6, 3" will claim, "bUt It'S nOt RaNdOm!" because of the "4,5,6" sequence.
There's another study where groups of people were asked to simulate dice-throws by writing down "randomly seleced" numbers from the set of 1 through 6. I think they were asked to generate a list of 100 such "randomly selected" numbers. It was easy to identify which lists were created by people and which were created by an actual pRNG, because the human-created ones never had runs of the same number and never had the numbers appear in any sort of sequence [like I did above].
People don't understand the concept of random-variables or randomness.
I also thought insects weren't animals. When I was 4. Then my dad asked me "then what are they? plants? rocks?" and I realized these flying, crawling things that are clearly alive must also count as animals. Would love to know what the person at 30:05 thinks they are.
I don't know if the person at 24:30 is Korean, but if he is, that's way too common. Every country tries to whitewash their legacy by skimming through certain parts of history. We're often taught how additional territories simply "became" part of the territory, without discussing how that happened. And if this seems like a typically American problem, it's because you haven't questioned the history of your own country.
This shouldn't be seen as something natural and inevitable; it should be fought against.
In fairness to the guy, he didn't double down when shown evidence he was wrong.
That's what always fascinated me in other countries.
Because Germany does teach how we f* up in the WWs and that there is an explanation but not a good excuse.
What frightens me is that the number of people saying that it is more or less irrelvant.
Sure: you have little to do with that now - but it is your history/legacy, too.
Those that don't know history are bound to repeat it.
People usually look into recent history - and SK was the victim pretty much through the entire 20th century - but that misses out on the other side of history - the before and how it worked.
I'm afraid of a time where it will be taught in Germany as "not so bad: here look at what was good".
@@ruthfischer7615 Honestly I give huge props to Germany for not sugar coating its history, or at least not as much as other nations.
He is Korean but born and raised in America, iirc. He's pretty funny. And he was totally wrong, as shown. I don't think it is taught in school in Korea, my kids are just starting elementary school in Korea so I'll update you in 12 years. I do know they emphasize the most recent 130 years in history class like we do in America.
From what I remember from studying Korean slavery in college, Korea didn't target other ethnicities for slavery. They mainly enslaved other Koreans, like a class system.
It has been quite a while and we didn't focus too much on it.
@@ruthfischer7615 To be fair it's kind of already happened in the US. I grew up in a part of the US with alot of German heritage (myself included). I don't know if this line of thinking is common throughout the US or only in areas of high German ancestry. But basically all of WWII is blamed on the allies of WWI. What is even crazier is the line of thinking when carried to its conclusion means that these same allies should have started WWIII. Basically we were taught that all blame for WWII (especially in terms of Germany) was due to the Treaty of Versailles, and especially a clause establishing German guilt for WWI. So basically WWII was caused because the WWI victorious allies said Germany was guilty of causing the war. Therefore, we were blaming the allies for causing WWII, which theoretically should cause them to start WWIII using the Treaty of Versailles line of thinking... (Also reparations, but the Marshall Plan was like reparations in a way).
Luckily, in college and doing my own research I was able to find out that "blaming" WWII on the Treaty of Versailles has begun to fall out of fashion outside of far right, neo-Nazi circles. But yeah interestingly enough in the US, we were taught that the US, UK, and France caused WWII, at least in my public school.
1:20 its like the question of 'if an orchestra of 30 takes 45 minutes to finish a symphony how long would it take to finish it for 60?' the same amount cause that's not how that works...
I wonder if that teacher is an a.i. for not getting the context
@@blue4669 no no no no, I hate AI but don't insult them like that!
my brother has ADHD, i can confirm that he started dramatically fading away after i read the title of this video
I have DID and fade out of existence on a daily basis bc everyone knows DID isn’t real.
Was it in the style Marty McFly or Iron Man?
Both
@@Gloomdrake both at the same time
23:02
We have returned to the moon!
Armstrong/Aldrin weren't the only two to walk on the moon.
Conrad/Bean
Shepherd/Mitchell
Scott/Irwin - 1st time Lunar Rover vehicle driven on the moon
Young/Duke
Cernan/Schmitt - 3 days and 3 moonwalks.
12 people landed and walked on the surface (some even drove), 6 stayed in orbit while they did it in the command module.
28:58 As a South African I am in physical pain from being reduced to a "direction".
They probably live in _north america_ too lol
I guess you're a *directioner* ;] (one direction joke lol)
MUAHAHHAAHHA NOW WAIT AND SEE HOW I SUMMON A FANDOM
@@PrettiestPrincipleInLifetake my angry upvote and get out
@@NikoThePancakenice lol i dont live on a continent, only a direction!
'Giant fans to cool down Earth' might be the most adorable way to be wrong about climate change issues
Futurama ice cube sounding ahh
I mean. Technically the giant fans can help
That line hit me like how dams mug the electricity out of flowing water.
"Windmills do not work that way! Good night!"
Not only is the claim based on a scam but the person who did the study lied about the followup, lied about what some of the Parents had said about when and where they started having issues and to 'prove' his point he tortured children. There is an INCREDIBLE video from hbomberguy that I can't recommend enough on this.
It took me a short while to figure out what "the claim" was you referred to. I understood it was about vaccines causing autism but next timr if you want to go back to any meme, it would be helpful to either put a timestamp or actually say "the vaccine caused autism-claim" or something like that 😊
19:40 You can "probably" use this to get extra free trials for some things by adding random dots when you sign up. For legal reasons this is only in "theory" of course, I certainly have never done this ;)
"It is scientifically impossible to cross the ocean" Stop the planet, I want to get off.
I clicked this video. So did you. He is the click.
He is in fact the click.
0o0
He is THE click
That's alleged
By the emperor, he is correct
I'm not a gym person, but I love seeing Joey Swole get on and just decimate ignorant individuals with pure facts. His delivery is so smooth and confident even as he dishes out those burns.
Same
I watch his vids as they come out on his youtube and honestly it is so crazy to see how many self centered jerks there are in the world (not that I already haven't seen too many of those people but he highlights just how negatively people like that can affect an entire space)
31:40 Carbon commissions is wild lmao. Love the video. Thanks for giving my haha muscles a good workout.
I love Donna Noble's quote about how "the dice don't know what the dice did last time." It feels particularly relevant to that stats lesson
Remember that things like Steam achievement completion rates include everyone who has ever even just launched the game. So those people who have never died are going to mostly be people who launched the game, tried it for a bit then quit. Add to that people who got the game free/in a bundle and just launched it to get card drops, (if it has them), and new players who haven't died yet.
43:50 Jesus did not only turn water into wine. He turned A LOT of water into A LOT of really good wine for a party. After people had already drunk all the wine that was there before (so we can assume some people were already quite intoxicated)
from my personal life experience i feel like people just bully adhd havers until we don't outwardly show our adhd-ness 😂 i think ive gotten really good at masking to avoid the social negativity
The best thing about the American bald eagle with the rock nest is that the zoo got a baby American bald eagle that had lost it's parents but needed an adult eagle to care for it to survive and gave the male American bald eagle a chance at being a dad and put his nest with the baby in a separate enclosure, the video of him meeting his baby is so cute. He has been raising the baby eagle beautiful and is a very proud dad ❤️ it is truly amazing
One night on Xitter (pronounced "shitter"), a guy didn't the better part of an hour trying to convince me that bats weren't mammals, they were birds. Because they fly. Only birds fly. Mammals can only walk.
Finally i told him "okay, you win ", because the stupidity was hurting my brain. He didn't just double down, he gogolplexed down.
Did you ask him why he thought birds could have nipples, fur, and teeth, and give live birth?
Also, that's when you counter with "bats aren't birds because birds aren't real" to add some spice to the conversation.
@@feuerlingGives me "you believe in the moon?" vibes
by his logic, I guess penguins are fish
You know, I was gonna say "Does he think insects are birds" but to be honest he probably doesn't consider insects animals.
I could be wrong, but Didn't Mark Twain say to not argue with Stupid because they'll beat you with experience?
14:28 the Indigenous Americans population pre-colonization is believed to be around 50-million with some historians saying 100-million or even higher
In most cases, white settlers just took over their farms plot-by-plot, 'marveling' over how 'god' had created 'natural' farmland.
21:30 - To be clear this is _only_ gmail, they did this to be user-friendly and it just causes confusion for most people. Other email providers don't do this, the dots do make different email addresses.
However! Gmail didn't do it at the beginning of things - I got an email address early-ish on in things, and chose one with a dot between my first and last name. If you omit the dot in mine, the email doesn't come to me. (I don't think that it goes to anyone else? But it def. doesn't come to me, as some companies have discovered when they tried to 'fix' my typo. Sigh. Even if I was just trying to do some filter thing, just let me have my systems, people.)
21:05 it's more like shipping a package labeled "123 dough st." and it shows up at "123 dough street"
I'd say more like "123 (annoyed grunt) St."
"Let me show you my rock collection" - YES!!!! I've been training my whole life for this.
I think he unlocked a new level of nerd there. With extra points for the googly eyes 😂
Loved it!
He got a happy stim from me when he said that
16:25 " Why did Neil Armstrong punch the man who asked if the Moon landing was fake? It was Buzz Aldrin, not Neil Armstrong that punched the man named Bart Sibrel. Sibrel had lured Buzz to a meeting under false pretenses."
“Neil Degree Tyson”
@@alex.r.891 huh