but this proves she has intelligence as she scored 112 which is in the top 79th percentile making her smarter than the vast vast majority of ppl. yes she lacks wisdom and humility, but objectively speaking, she has a pretty decent iq compared to the general public.
@@maximustrolleus9860 IQ and intelligence aren't the same thing, IQ isn't measuring how "smart" you are. So saying that just because her IQ is in the 79th percentile that she's "smarter" than the majority of people makes no sense.
For anyone that does not know exactly what Tyler does, a CBRN Defense Specialist is someone that specializes in defending against chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear (CBRN) threats. The average Marine (those with the jarhead tenacity Marines are known for) will not qualify for that position. Tyler is a very intelligent Marine, and the others underestimate him.
Thank you! I was wondering what exactly the job was. I figured it was something that required quite a bit of intelligence, he just didn’t brag about it.
While it does require a lot of knowledge it is more focused on adaptability and flexibility thinking so less about book smarts more on completion of the mission or goal I don't know if younger people have a new term but real world experience or street smarts. The books may say to do something one way he would have a simpler and probably better way to accomplish the task. Mainly from hands-on experience and listening to those who actually do the jobs instead of those who teach the jobs. When I took the ASVAB got a high score on everything except the automotive part mainly because I never learned what the tools were called never was into automotive more computers and while I was taught to break into and hotwire vehicles by my father but ask me to change a tire and I couldn't do it until I was in my thirties. I don't question my intelligence as I started freshman college at 15. But because of mental disabilities which did help in my intelligence my IQ probably sucks.
Exactly. It's as though the PhD doesn't know how statistics work. I scored 98 when I took the ASVAB... and I can tell that I've been the smartest guy in the room 98% of the time. ;)
@@ralphengland8559 i scored a 99 and was made to take it again as they watched me to make sure i was not cheating LOL i was 4Fed do to asthma and birth defects
@@rayzimmermin Same. Depending on the section, I scored 98 overall, with 1 section only a 93, and 2 others (math, science) at 99. We took it in the school gym as an entire class (600 kids taking it all at once). I was the first one done, and waited for something like 15-20 minutes, for someone else to turn theirs in (I didn't want to be first done) and scored the highest in the school. Ironically, senior year, I was invited to take psychology, and scored the highest of both Psychology classes on an official IQ test as well.
I scored 140 out of 99, but I was drunk on vodka, and come to think of it, I don’t even remember enlisting… I think it might of been the Russian version to be honest😅
Asking someone in the military if they think their job is something anyone can do is so disrespectful!!! The amount of not just physical but mental fortitude needed to succeed in the military is so commendable and rare to find.
The girl that told a Marine to his face she thinks you grow emotionally in college when he has the fortitude to walk into combat is the epitome of America right now. 🤦♀️
I think fortitude has nothing to do with intelligence and everything to do with courage and willpower. That said... The fact that she said specifically 'college is where you grow', when the military the world over is often seen as one big frat house is frankly laughable lol. That is 'all' about the regiment you're in, that's been confirmed to me by literally every single person I've spoken to who was a vet.
Not if he's overseas killing civilians in the middle east protecting the oil rigs in the countries the US has invaded under false pretense. Following a staged terror attack to create an excuse for war. But I get what you're trying say. It's just a little naive you think the military is there to protect citizens.
@@IvyMay-qn2ysI think it's a little naive to believe that the military is filled with nothing but jarheads looking for an excuse to kill people. I didn't support the war, but what you're insinuating is very insulting to the many men and women who died so you can bitch about it on the internet. To be a warrior involves sacrificing a part of your humanity so innocent people can retain their own. That includes you. So use that humanity and show a little empathy to these people who have seen and endured more than you can ever imagine.
Tyler’s EQ is off the charts. He is able to empathize with everyone placing him low without taking it personally. Maria is the opposite by getting angry about her placement. I bet she’d be at the bottom of an EQ test results as well.
I’d argue he’s just used to it from being in the marines. Leadership there is full of kids, who just demean their subordinates. Not intelligence, but submission
She probably spent all her life being told she's special, then in college, because she's a women and fits in the "diversity chart", she got even more special treatment and people walking on eggshells around her, it's not surprising she thinks she's royalty. She cares more about image than anything else, you can bet she rather work for free in a prestigious position than be paid millions to do "real" work.
@user-er2nj3le5b that's such an uneducated nonsense comment. Either you washed out, are a self entitled wannabe elitist like Maria, or not from the USA, would have no way of knowing or backing up your statement and allowing your jealousy and envy to show.
@@ameliawester it's not submission if you've ever served. It's called tact and you learn how to be tactful with those around you so you aren't overstepping your bounds whilst not being too passive
And basically insulting someone based purely on his career choice. When she asked if anyone could do his job, it was insanely disrespectful. She couldn't even run the drive through at a Wendy's, let alone be a Marine.
Human beings, in general, are dumb, what we have is just "practice + repetition = learning". I rarely saw generative or creative human beings in my life. The number of them is lower than what you imagine!
Plus she handles her relatively low score with a scowl and evident bitterness. Tyler was certainly perturbed by the assumption that he was low IQ, but he didn't throw a mini fit.
Imo being a defense specialist in the military at 21 is pretty damn impressive. He had to have worked really hard to get into that position at such a young age.
Army CBRN Specialist here, it really isn't that hard to become a CBRN specialist TBH. Had several classmates that where 18 or 19 when we graduated AIT. Now, getting to the high level such as CBRN Warrant, Technical Escort, etc., that is impressive because those take several years to get certified and educated in.
@@KillerAceUSAFa CBRN cert for my MOS to certify cargo is worth about 5,000$ and up in the civillian world my MOS can get it for free and it stays with you even after you get out, the course is also really hard
I don't think that woman actually listened to what he did in his job, she went to s.w.m and military and assumed he wasn't smart. Real insult to those who protect and protected this country. 🇺🇸
Tyler getting a 94 on the Asvab is the equivalent to a 1420 on the SAT. He's super smart and the people around him had no clue what getting a 94 meant.
@@IanJenn356094I went bang bang and got a 99. Sorry to burst your libtard social constructs, but the highest scores and most advanced degrees in the Marine Corps selectively choose Intelligence and Infantry as the two most popular MOS’s. You should see what scores the genius liberal technocrat Robert McNamara was forcing into the Army during the Vietnam War. Watch Forrest Gump or Project 100,000/McNamara’s Morons…
I'm a 12 year served Marine Corps 2336/ 6541 (Explosive Ordnance Disposal Technician/ Aircraft Ordnance Technician) Veteran. I can honestly tell you, that intelligence kept me alive and saved lives on the battle field. I guarantee that those people whos lives I saved, don't give a shit where I did or didnt go to school. Theyre living
@@christiansgrignoli3351I think most veterans who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan would agree with you buddy. Don’t take it up with our veterans, take it up with our government.
My father used to tell me, "just because a person has a piece of paper on the wall doesn't mean they're intelligent. It simply means they passed a school's curriculum."
@@aaronarguijo8293iq is the best way too measure intelligence, it’s how we know animals are intelligent such as crows with thier problem solving skills. That’s why an engineer will be sent to mars too start a new human civilization where as a lawyer is worth as much as cow sht
You can't get a PHD degree and have IQ of 70. People with that IQ usually do worse in life financially and in their careers. So having a PHD definitely is some sort of validation that you have knowledge and at the same time the Intelligence to adopt that knowledge and apply it... Not everyone can be Einstein...
Tyler mentioned he’s a CBRN specialist. That’s a hell of a lot of information he needs to know. It stands for Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear. He helps defend our country against those kinds of weapons, as well as cleaning up any hazardous material spills or accidents. Not an easy job at all.
He also scored a 94 on the ASVAB. That means he scored higher than 94% of people who took it. And since something like 40% of people are graduating college now, and we have things like affirmative action and quotas, Tyler probably outperforms 90% of college graduates as well. Scoring in the 90s doesn't make you a genius, but it does put you in the higher echelons of the population.
Cleaning up that stuff doesn’t mean you know how each electron or proton interacts with each other or how cells develop. That’s why biomed engineers exist so they can make meds based off of it… it’s cool that he can do that but that doesn’t make him a genius
tyler certainly does not represent the average person in the military. had tyler been some average military personnel and the PhD person had a PhD in a more math/problem solving field, this would have played out completely differently. this jubilee video was likely rigged to play out like this
Quite hilarious that Maria can't stop bringing up EQ, the ability to understand, use, and manage your own emotions in positive ways to relieve stress, communicate effectively, empathize with others, overcome challenges and defuse conflict, yet can't nail a single facet of it. In fact, Tyler showcased his ability to do all of these things effectively. He was upbeat, took the negative with stride and saw the humor in it. He was direct and clear with his assessment of what intelligence is to him. He agreed that in their shoes he would probably view himself the same way, empathy. I don't think many words need to be said about a specialized marine overcoming challenges. He also diffused conflict by not taking his peer ranking personally inserting humor in a non antagonizing way. I am fairly sure he would SMOKE maria in an EQ score as well.
Yeah Maria doesn't have a very high EQ. Look at how she acted when she found out she had the lowest IQ. Definitely a touch of superiority complex and also some childish entitlement
Not to mention, he is a CBRN warfare specialist. His job is literally covering 4 fields of study, all while assessing his situation in combat, and doing it accurately. Not even bringing up the fact they also have to basically do the job of EOD as well if it's something such as a chemical bomb, as well as go through a medical training school to learn to counter and treat specific ailments that come with their field of study. From what I have gathered, they're the underrated SpecOp. units of the military through descriptions from 2 friends who are also CBRN in the Army.
Fun Fact: Top psychologists say that EQ is not measurable, some can't even define it. It's a sum of other thing like empathy and collective awareness, and those are not objective traits as what we measure in IQ tests
@@thefall3n4nge1 indeed, that's the dude that keeps people from dying when Death shows up at the front door. He's gotta have brains and the ability to use them wisely. Military doesn't want robots, it wants people who can take orders, think and get things done without being micromanaged.
This is one of my favourite Jubilee episodes - this highlights many of the issues we are facing with the current education system; Plus, people who are/ were in military have my utmost respect. Ray and Tyler also showed the highest EQ in this group.
This is so funny to me because my dad always did and still does tell me “dumb people will always think they are smarter than you” and this video is literally the epitome of that 😂
As a former marine that ended up getting my engineering degree after serving, my experience as a marine prepared me much more as an actual engineer now ironically. My peers and I joke that what we did in school hardly ever reflects to what we do on a daily basis. Being able to work with a team and adapt to difficult situations is something you can't teach in school.
I have a similar experience (but I'm german). After finishing school i went to the Military as was every man in the day (draft Was still a thing). As a conscript I surely didn't have the most specialized Training, but I had to learn to work as part of a Team. To push my Limits. After that I made an apprenticeship and After that i studied to be an Ingenieur (Engineer). I will not say that studies are useless, but I also agree that this Kind of Military experience helps a lot. (P.S. I sometimes joke that I also learned that sometimes you are smarter than your superior but he still has the last say...) Have a good day.
agreed - came straight out of eng school only to be unprepared for the real world. Working at min wage jobs prepared me more for life than a flimsy piece of paper. Now I'm working in the industry doing what I love but it was a long journey to get here. Wish they teach life skills in school
My marine coworker is just like that. Amazing guy to work with. Absolutely hilarious and friendly. Not going to say what job I do, everyone hates my job and calls it the least intelligent job there is. But we all get along. It's all about how you work together and learn. Education doesn't always mean intelligence. That can be learned. If only the public can see that.
Twain's sarcasm was hilarious. If you've never heard one of his speeches, you can find some on YT. He was an extremely funny guy. Another that there are no video recordings of, but you can tell from printed accounts was, was Ben Franklin. Churchill, when disdainfully told he was drunk at a party stated something like, "Yes madam, but you are ugly, and I shall be sober in the morning". Not too bad, either.
@@MrJdsenior Mark Twain is an international treasure... the man was saying the truth in the most creative and funny way... the other one of his that is brilliant is "They tell me that because I don't read the paper I am uninformed... so I tell them that I'd rather not read it and be uninformed than read it and be misinformed"... hahahaha... brilliant...
I know this is an old one, but I love the quote: "A soldier is someone who has given up their freedom, for us to have ours." that applies to all parts of the world. So thank you for that.
Studying in uni doesn't make you smarter. You eather can analyse things or not. I know many people with impressive degrees but they all got jubbed in cavid times 🥱
I love that not only did the PhD have the lowest IQ, the separation was dramatic. The top four were within 5 points of each other. Then PhD girl was 24 points lower than #1
And bear in mind that, given bell-curve nature of the plotting of the IQ scale, once you are past the average section a small increase in the IQ number puts you in a much rarer category.
And she responded with eq and whatever other nonsense it was. I were to break it down into 3 things I would say G which is affected by fluid and chrystaline intelligence.
@@petmensan EQ, although more is involved, most simply see EQ as the ability to get along, play well with others. While helpful not really related to actual intelligence at all, most dogs get along very well with most people as well.
I think Tyler exhibited excellent emotional and social maturity and skill. When the entire group unfairly judged him, he was still polite, respectful, and could have a laugh with them. He is able to understand their reasoning and bias, but it doesn't break him (like how maria couldn't handle being put last). I love at 23:02 he deadpan states what they think. (Gotta know your enemy) Not agreeing, not mad, just: this is the fact, and that's ok. He knows what he knows about intelligence. He also knows he was never going to convince them otherwise. Life was going to be their best teacher on that.
Imagine any other person there allowing themselves to be the quiet mistreated scapegoat like that. They can’t even control their rude intrusive snickering. EQ is emotional control and understanding, not having emotions control you and spill out everywhere unfiltered.
@@mokane86He was probably thinking, at the back of his mind, "I already know how this will end - me breathing in the same space is enough of an effort."
One knows damn well they are not going to charge their indoctrinated "mind" when you look into their eyes and realize that you've seen more comprehension while gazing into the eyes of a chicken.
I am a 78 year old retired Marine Corps officer. I was first an artillery officer and then a logistics officer. I had a nuclear officer secondary specialty in the artillery. I went to Vietnam and I endured some of the crap the civilian community threw at the military at that time. I went to college because I wanted to be an officer, but I didn't learn all that much more than I knew already. It was primarily a four year maturing process, but Vietnam matured me a lot faster than a four year college. I understood the civilian viewpoint ( I worked in the civilian world after retirement from the Marines and I owned my own business), but I was also very aware that those not having served in the military did not have the experience and education I did for getting through life; i.e., problem solving, leadership (I commanded artillery batteries and logistics companies of 200-300 people and was second in command of a motor transport battalion of 2,000), honor, integrity, civility, empathy and patriotism to the most wonderful country in the world, not to mention a sharpened amount of common sense. Many highly educated people have little to none of those qualities and are turned inward to their own selfish identity. It galls me that many of those who never served in the military, dislike the military so much. Freedom provides a flavor of life that those who have not contributed to it will never know. Until I know that someone has done something beyond themselves for their nation and community, I am not very interested in knowing them. My hat is off to the young man who gave of himself for something bigger than himself. Without him and people like him, America will die.
Tyler very casually mentioned his ASVAB score being 96 and working in CBRN which has two possible reactions - Non military aware: “96 isn’t 100” and “What’s a CBRN?” -Military aware: “96? Holy shit” and the general understanding that CBRN is about Chemical, Biological, Radiation and Nuclear defense and response
I scored highest in my region...99. The recruiters came out of the woodwork. I eventually went in the Navy as an electronics technician. Got out. Got a Masters and went in the Army as a commissioned officer as a Chemical Warfare Officer. I worked in the same field as that young marine. So proud of our young soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines. It takes dedication. It takes nerve. It takes intelligence. And it takes chutzpah. If you really want to know if you have what it takes to be real and be of true worth. Take a job serving others. Be a nurse, a firefighter, a soldier. Serve your community and quit patting yourself on the back for your 9 to 5 and your degree that won't get you anything real.
That's a military speaking. His IQ is irrelevant if he stays ignorant or uses it in unproductive ways. Some of the most violent criminals have higher IQ than his. And he still chose to use his intelligence for war.
Tyler is a CBRN tech. That stands for Chemical, Biological, Radiation, Nuclear tech. He is there to train Marines and maintain sophisticated equipment to detect these types of weapons. He is very smart and did the Corps proud. I’m Navy so I love talking shit to Marines but he made me proud with his demeanor and confidence.
When it comes to a PhD, you are specifically honing your intelligence and skills to a specific topic. You could be extremely intelligent in those topics and very well-versed it, and then have no idea about how to cook and how to garden or even the latest trends. There are those individuals who have a very well-rounded intelligence and they pick up things very quickly. And that is the difference between holding a PhD versus having an overall high IQ.
Definitely the most direct and to the point, which speaks to me that he's someone who transmits information as efficiently as possible without wasting words xD Doesn't exactly imply high intelligence but it does say something about his priorities, which don't include wasting time chattering, and I would *correlate* that with a higher IQ
He basically told people his IQ in the intro. The ASVAB is a type of IQ test where the average is a 50 and the top score is a 99. Scoring a 94 is exceptional. Take that intelligence and add in the training to make snap decisions based on factual information and not feelings, the dude is an information processing machine.
Please state your experience with this. I spent 15 years as the personnel database manager and the field for ASVAB score does not accept three digit values. @@JoeL91939
ASVAB tests practical knowledge. It's different from IQ tests which tests ability to learn. The language part of the ASVAB where they are looking to see if you'll make a good translator could be considered an IQ test of sorts since it focuses on pattern recognition.
Damn good point! It also shows his ethics that he was willing to sacrifice a good part of his life as a trade for the paid education. Those in the military will understand what I mean by "sacrifice" and I am not talking about the risking death type of sacrifice in this case.
This is somewhat of an uninformed take. When pursuing a graduate degree in STEM (specifically a PhD or Masters of Science), the general rule is that the student doesn't pay for courses. In addition, said student will most likely receive a stipend from their respective institution for teaching a course or performing research under a principal investigator. If an offer is made to a prospective graduate student where it is expected that they pay for courses, then it would typically be seen as a 'soft' rejection.
The fact that you consider selling your life a proof of intelligence disproves yours. What he learned was fighting and killing. And what does he fight for exactly?
I literally love your opinion. I subscribed because you are fair to men. Marines are trained to be confident. Because if your company leader is killed, you have to be confident to lead; Not crawl under your desk praying for a Marine. I grew up in the projects, as a white kid in the 1970s. I was the 1st kid in my entire geneology to Graduated from college. I went into the Navy, then KSU. After being laid off in my late 30's I worked towards a post graduate online at PSU for GIS&T at night. I had awife and 4 kids to support. Now, I work for the FAA as a Geographical Information Specialist. When in HS my reacher asked why I was on the bus to visit a college. In the Navy I didn't get a school. My mom committed suicide. I just never gave up. I took temp jobs to get experience. Fact is college is not a guarantee. I suck at English and I do have a learning disability. I just never used it as an excuse nor told anyone.
I was a combat medic for 21 years, I have no degree but a shitload of training. I worked with a lot of very educated individuals and we would help each other which is one thing I loved about serving. Doctors asking me “how the hell do I do this” and at the same time I was asking “can you explain this to me”. There is a LOT of intelligence in this world that is overlooked by the ignorant ❤
I was a marine engineer in the Army, imagine that. Met plenty of soldiers with IQs well over 130, and able to master completely disparate skills rapidly, plus retain the information and skills for years. Also met some college grads that must have had their degrees issued in a Cracker Jacks box.
@@johnraygun9868 Two deployments in Kuwait making sure they got back to the States on schedule. Met quite a few services members, all branches, that were fearsomely smart individuals. Plus, troubleshooting skills and ability to adapt on the fly, was pretty much mandatory.
For those wondering 94 on ASVAB is a percentile score. And his MOS has a GT score (basically an IQ) requirement minimum of 110. So the military would have told Maria (112) that she's barely smart enough to even bother starting to learn Tyler's job.
That's actually crazy!! I'm not American so I watched this from the outside. My country is one with the higher Iq percentage in the region but 112 still sounds "smartes person in the room" even knowing that it doesn't necessarily mean that. Personally I scored 108 when I was 18 and there were three people in my class with better scores. I don't feel nearly as smart as any of them. But people with lower scores still did good in different fields so I take iq more like a test to logic maybe(? I don't think that thinking quicker makes you necessarily smarter or anything and actually I really identify with Brett's statement about her and her brother. I'm in the same boat. Quick question to end the essay I wrote. Is it common to take an iq test in the US? I know you take AST and all that but I never looked up exactly what they are. Have a nice day everyone!! Ps my English is really rusty so let me know if I just murdered your mother tongue. Apologies will be issued
@@claudiosanchez764 the only English mistake was using the adjective "good" where the adverb "well" was appropriate, but the majority of native speakers do this. Missing commas (run-on-sentence) is pretty standard, too.
@claudiosanchez764 When I was a kid in the 80s, IQ tests were normal and most kids took them. When my kids went to school in the 2000s, it is something you have to ask for and pay for most of the time.
@@laurasomebody thank you!! If I remember correctly in my country it is done mostly in private school's and if they do it in a public one (my case) is usually just because we ask for it or because there is a teacher with curiosity and the willpower to organise it I think. I assume there is a margen for error in those tests anyway. Have a great day and thanks for answering!!
That is an old material; but the only thing I can say about Maria is that as soon as she realizes she ranks last in IQ, she contradicts her earlier statements and undermines the legitimacy of the IQ test ("there is also EQ, common sense" blabla). She blatantly lacked emotional intelligence by bragging about her work and diplomas and by trying to humiliate Tyler. This was a very satisfying backlash to watch.
well we know common sense will be a weakness of hers as well so maybe the EQ whatever that is will be the thing for her. the tests only matter if she does well on it.
She didn't rank last though, i remember watching this video and at the moment she was supposedly ranking in the 110's as she said... and this was like two or three years ago, in which case, if being true, she is ranking higher than most people in the world, maybe lowest in that group of the jubilee video but higher than most people in the world...
I graduated high school with an IQ of 143 and scored 99 on the ASVAB to which they thought I cheated on. Education is the ability to learn but is also a weapon for judgement towards others. If a person has no common sense then their education means nothing because they can't think for themselves and follow the pack.
I’m going with Tyler being the smartest and most grounded. His body language, eye contact, how he speaks, delivery of speech, his critical thinking. He can walk into a room and the gravity would immediately shift to his direction like he owns it and everyone in it.
A lot of that is emotional IQ, which isn't quantified on standardized tests. The Ph.D. clearly has a VERY low emotional IQ in spite of being intelligent.
@@JasonSmith-wj2ht There is no such thing as Emotional IQ Because IQ Means Intelligence Quotient The word you should have used is EQ - Emotional Quotient There is no Emotional Intelligent ! That's an impossibility! It's either / or. It's a spectrum! You can not be both black and white on a colour wheel (Not to ge confused with race terms which has nothing to do with this whatsoever so don't even try to make irrelevant comments y'all) You're either black, white or a shade of grey (there are many in between) Emotional (emoathy) and Intelligent (rational) are two poles at the ends of a spectrum and there's a lot that goes on in between This comes from Autism spectrum theory. The Systemiser (Intelligence) and Empathiser (Emotions). Everyone has both but one is greater than the other. To what degree either puts you into more Autistic or more Neurotypical territory. Women are a lot rarer to be in a Systemiser group / autism spectrum that's why women tend to be more emotional and more diplomatic (i.e. crafty and manipulative) and more social. And men tend to be more rational, straightforward and honest. Men who lie and cheat are more feminine in personality. I'm a woman and I'm on a Systemiser side and I value intelligence higher because I understand it. Accuracy and facts matter. Emotions have their place but all I see from emotions is drama and selfishness and Me, Me, Me !! I may be lacking in skills and lazy as heck, but make allowances for me because I'm oppressed and DESERVE special treatment and free money and gifts, just because, because "I'm worth it!" And I'm sick of what women are being taught to become through the media brainwashing. I'm glad at least men are resisting this BS Others are weak. Probably poisoned by their contaminated water
Maria telling Tyler his intelligence ranking has nothing to do with his background while in the same breath ranking everyone else on their educational background is so damn funny to me, no wonder she’s the lowest ranked in IQ. They are all ranking him on a completely separate scale because he said something that struck a nerve in all of them. Glad Tyler humbled their egos and is living proof your education background does equate to intelligence. Semper fi brother!
Yeah she's above average intelligence but unfortunately the way this generation thinks, it seems even lower because of those kinda talking points. It's all this farcical way of speaking that works amongst your own, but anywhere else, the real world day to day, people will think oh lord I'm getting away from this person. And I can't help but think characters like that internalize that rejection and have for years now. I'm polite and civil, but I definitely ghost when the red flags show up. They're just trouble, with absolutely zero benefit to yourself.
The fact that Maria somehow has an IQ (according to the internet) of 110 makes me think I might be a genius or something. Or IQ is just an inefficient way of measuring someone's intelligence level. Bc she ain't smart
@@03stmlax110 is just above average-which isn’t surprising because while it no longer takes a genius, it’s still hard to get a PhD with below average intelligence. But problem (and dead giveaway) is when you combine slightly higher IQ with a lack of humility (and in her case, narcissistic personality seems likely)… you get behavior and rigidity of thinking that looks very smart to those fooled by the act… and very irrational and destructive to those who see through it. The reality is often more mundane though-she’s just smart enough to know how to puff herself up and get something out of it, but not self aware enough to know or see how idiotic that makes her look to everyone else. She’s neither super smart nor super dumb, just near average but misguided… and grotesque.
I loved the reveal moment... it was powerful. And I wish more people appreciated the wit and resilience of those who serve or have served in the military - their intelligence, bravery and selfless contribution, to name a few more of their qualities
I noticed something about Maria that marked her as low intelligence almost immediately. She made most of her statements based on emotions rather than any factual information. The thing that gave her away was her “feeling” about intelligence being about examining other’s viewpoints. Intelligence isn’t about feelings, it’s about determining what is correct and finding solutions to problems. The proper way is to examine viewpoints and find out what is really correct, regardless of how anyone feels.
I don’t really understand how Maria could have said those things about Tyler. He had a certainty to his opinion just like the rest did, and he demonstrated a no-nonsense confidence in himself, but he more than anyone there also showed an abundance of considering others’ viewpoints. Even to the detriment of his own ego. Being smart enough to show humility and even a sense of humor in the face of judgment is a real demonstration of intelligence in my opinion.
She was also making it seem as if she was smarter than she really was especially when she was bragging about making those Covid testing kits blah blah blah you could see her gestures she’s so vain
5 of them mixed emotions with their thought process on the rankings, the two that held their emotions the most in scaling, are no.1 and no.5. My IQ is 124, and genuinely, I've seen more on the lower scale are successful. Education and achievements barely scratch intelligence scale as people who have great memories and learning ethics could get a PHD, and then it conflicts with their passion. Also you want to end most problems in the world, this scale shows, only IQ above 135 should be allowed to vote.
That and it's just plainly obvious her depth of thought is very shallow. Plus, just how she speaks is very average, at best. Doesn't scream intelligence. I honestly think there's something to be said for being slightly lower IQ, or at least closer to average, making it easier to tolerate trudging through the monotony of studying the same subject with the kind of commitment you need to finish a PhD. It's 90% drive and commitment, not brains, in many fields that gets you across the finish line. My biggest problem was not comprehension or the work, I don't think I ever got a B in my life, it was losing interest in something and wanting to move on to learning more about a new subject I knew very little about. There's so much amazing shit in the world, I do not want to devote my life to going that hard in just one field of study. I know bartenders and gas station clerks and a guitar tech, all who have greater intellectual prowess than almost everyone I've ever known who has a master's degree or better. I die inside whenever I hear someone say, "they have a phD so you know they're smart.." Motivated? Absolutely, sure. Smart? Definitely not guaranteed. It's not that hard to roughly guess where someone falls on the IQ scale just by a decent, relatively quick conversation. And it kills me even more when I hear people make dumbass jokes about the intelligence of people just because they have a mundane job. Late night "comedians" are really good for those type of terrible jokes.
My dad graduated with a law degree from a prestigious school only to turn away from that career to become a farmer. He would always say, “Don’t let school get in the way of your education.” Still the wisest man I ever knew.
This probably sounds weird, but your dad and I would likely be good friends. I got indicted into the "gifted program" when I was 9 and graduated high school with a 4.0 and glowing recommendations from my teachers. Ended up dropping out after the first semester of college, and now I'm working your average 9-5, collectively working with my close group of friends toward buying some cheap land up north and homesteading. Probably the best decision of my life, at least from where I'm currently at; I'm a lot happier now than when I was stressed out of my mind trying to do well in school, just so I could make enough money to live comfortably in one of the cheapest major cities.
I felt so bad for Tyler getting ragged on so hard directly and indirectly the entire time. They obviously tried to veil their bigotry, but they failed to. I hope he takes it on the chin and gets on with his life. Also, Thank you, Tyler, for your service. It takes a special person to sign up for the military in this day and age.
Why do you feel srry he knew it from the moment he heard their education... If he didnt he would be less smart then i would give him credit for. Basically u can have an iq of 395 and have no degree and all people with degrees would rank you 6th... Cos people see intelligence as the piece of paper u studied for... This is just the way the world works and lets be honest Tyler doesnt look like a soldier any1 with eyes and half a brain could see he has above intelligence... So that his skillset comes from his brain and not his brawn should have been visible from the introduction... With all due respect offc cos he might be fitter then me :-). Im just saying if people are claiming to be so intelligent they should have noticed this from a mile away...
@@SL-mj2eq they should have noticed after he said what his job was, he is a CBRN defence specialist, if the rest of them are so intelligent why didn’t they think to ask what that was?
@@conorstewart2214 Exactly, none of them had a clue about military and didn't bother to ask. I didn't know what CBRN was either, hell when I googled it I type "seaburn defense specialist", thankfully google figured it out. If they knew what all he has to know, they would have ranked him much higher. Hell he probably know 1/2 of the disease stuff that the Phd does.
A special person to join the military? Have you seen "The Calling" recruitment videos? Good ol' Emma and her multimoms? The US military has no standards anymore. They're all about hugging and sharing feelings. There's not even yelling anymore. Just more hugs in boot camp. The US military is weak sauce.
I've seen this video before, and I agree with you. But I want to talk about your channel. This is one of the first channels I've watched where I didn't want to skip ahead. I watched the entire video and you gave commentary that I actually wanted to listen to. And stating your background showed credibility towards what you were talking about. You have a great channel and I will continue to watch it. Good work.
I love how throughout the whole thing, Maria was so cocky and her body language was so open. Then, when she got placed at 6th with a very low 112, she crossed her legs, closed her jacket over her, and just felt humiliation. Just love it.
If anything this shows that IQ doesn’t matter that much. She had an IQ a lot of people might have, above average but not insane, and is like a cancer research hero in society honestly. She was probably the most credentialed out of all the contestants. I think this video is meant to be like a dunk, but it really just shows that lower iq, as in not outlier high, can still have successful careers. Also don’t listen to cooper about college, college degrees are still like the best way to improve wealth in a family. Just don’t be stupid and take a bunch of loans, go to a local college.
@@dominicteneriello9977 I agree that hard work will out trump intelligence most the time. The marine may have been smart, but he also made some dumb decisions. College absolutely can still be valuable, but it's definitely not for everyone. My best friend makes 6 figures a year and only classes he's taken is to get his CDL.
What still gets me everytime is the general elitism of the group and how completely unaware they are of it. Most of them probably spent a lot of time talking about the importance of inclusivity and being non-judgemental but when it comes down to it, they immediately fall back on stereotypes and personal biases with no hesitation. Seeing all of them be humbled to some extent is still very satisfying to watch.
So true! As I've gotten older I've realized that intelligence and stupidity exists in all corners of life, and you should always give people a chance to prove themselves either way. Some of the smartest and wisest people I ever met were restaurant dishwashers, enlisted military, etc., while some of the dumbest had high degrees.
Just shows the “inclusivity” woke nonsense is all hypocrisy bc it’s all inclusive until it’s someone from a group that doesn’t benefit them, such as the military.
It's often the narcissists who gloats about being an "empath", as if they have been anointed with some extra special gift that is actually a basic human trait.
I have moderate dyslexia and severe disgrafia and I have been home schooled all my life and have a above average iq proving that going to a high ranked school doesn’t mean squat
Was it just me or did Maria's hair at the end look extremely dishevelled, as if she was pulling it out after the results, and quickly smoothed it out for the camera. I would hate to be around her for the next few 27:57 no doubt, Tyler is living rent free in her brain.
And yet he was the one showing the highest EQ of them all. Whereas the girl who ranked last was bitching in her mind about the results. Sweet Karma haha!
It's because it doesn't exist. EQ is just a made up metric for or by people who are not intelligent, so that they can at least claim to have some kind of intelligence.
My son got a 99 on the ASVAB test, he has an IQ of 145, he is an artillery officer. I got a 98 on the ASVAB test and i spent 3 1/2 years in the airborne infantry. There are a lot of very smart people in the military, we serve for many reasons. I am proud that I served and proud that my son is serving. Do not look down on anyone in the military, most of them have seen more or have done more in a couple years than most people will experience in their lives.
@@WoodysOpinion101 I'm not saying people are smarter because they have seen or done more, I'm saying that there are smart people in the military. In the video the marine was graded low because they thought that because he's a marine he must not be smart.
@@falkeborg9432 I've always loved military history. When school didn't work out after high school I wanted something physical, that's why I joined the infantry and the airborne. I was enlisted but I told my son if he joined he should be an officer. We both believe it's an honor to serve even though it takes a toll on the body. I'm 90% disabled but would do it again if given the choice. I was jump qualified, scuba qualified, small arms and explosive qualified, desert, jungle, winter and mountain qualified all before my 22nd birthday.
The Corps has taught Tyler to improvise, adapt and overcome. At 21 y.o., he’s light years ahead of so many folks with college diplomas. His ASVAB score of 94 ranks him with the cream of the crop.
my brother scored 98 on the ASVAB, a rarity I would assume, so I asked him right after he took the exam why not just score a 100? ...he opened up his Pokemon Ball that he takes with him everywhere and it was half filled with weed then replied "man , I was high as f**k, I couldn't be bothered." he joined the Air Force as a Crypto. I scored a 32, barely passed it..... I joined the ...i'm too ashamed to say, I'll spare my fellow servicemen the humility, but enlisting in the U.S. Military made me more hungry to learn and be more educated. I'm so proud of my brother, he's done is 20 odd years and retired and now in Med School for Neural Science.
I got a 98 too, there is no 100, 99 is the top. I didn't get my OUI waivers approved though, so I got a master's degree instead(which I WANTED to do for free, should've enlisted BEFORE I went out and got two OUIs)@@jasperfatty4915
@@jasperfatty4915The ASVAB only goes up to a 99 for some reason. My recruiter never gave me an answer that made sense, and I scored a 91 on it. Maybe the answer to that is hidden within the scores above mine lol
I taught in public school for 38 years. The twenty years, the curriculum became a total push for college prep, especially in my area of Math. That didn’t mean they were teaching with better strategies, but they were neglecting basic skills for moving faster and teaching higher levels.
Tyler's EQ is probably the highest judging by how he handled all the darts on him, his personality, his choice of military, etc. Her face, sitting at the lowest IQ seat was priceless!! Then of course she goes to EQ because her emotions were hurt, her pillar collapsed so she had to excuse herself back up which leads me to believe her EQ score is probably low too. Once the others realized they weren't as high as they thought, they started making excuses, which proves lack of intelligence, critical thinking, and probably a lower EQ score if they were offended and defensive to that reality.
EQ score is some made up bs to make certain people happy about themselves. The ability to lead or be a good team member is not quantifiable and is only determined through experience. The PHD thought she had a good EQ. Would anyone want to follow her or the Yaley anywhere? Would you want either on your team? Would you hire either one? I hire people all the time and 1, 2, and 3 would be good picks if their skill set matched. I would not hire 4 or 6.
@@susanKWithAnEThank you! EQ came from some articake in a magazine. It is NOT recognized, nor can it be measured. Or, you could just say, Empathy.... SMH.....
The Marine’s credentials were excellent. The other “highly intelligent” members of the group had zero curiosity about the Marine’s qualifications or job. They didn’t even ask what CBRN stood for, or what ASVAB even was. They had already made up their minds that he was not intelligent just because he was military and hadn’t attended a university. Speaks volumes to their prejudice against others’ life choices, and their lack of “EQ”.
@@jtodd19 meh. I have no curiosity about the military either. Doesn't mean I don't have curiosity about everything I don't know, but people have different interests and that's fine.
@@ysf-d9i Okay well, the marine in the video was a Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear (CBRN) Defense Specialist. That is impressive no matter who you are.
Tyler is an absolute legend. As a person who grew up around retired soldiers and firemen, i would not be able to keep my cool as well as Tyler did. We should all strive to be more like tyler
You noticed Tyler when the PhD lady he crosses his arms in basic body language he closed himself off to her idea of education believing numbers are important
It's funny because Maria babbles on about being emotionally intelligent when Tyler is the one who displayed the most emotional intelligence out of all of them
We just have to keep this video up forever. It is one of the most satisfying videos I have ever seen. It would be great if someone who knew how to navigate the academic system could find her PhD thesis and publish it. I'm sure its grade school intelligence would be humorous.
It's painfully obvious though without doing IQ testing whose smarter in a lot of these comparisons. And the thing about intellect is that it really does not matter. Being smarter does not mean more moral, nor better than anyone else so I find the whole conversation to be a dumb thing. Just like beauty, intellect within humanity tends to bring ego and pride which often than not makes people worse or harms them if they don't seek growth and self reflection. I'm a guy with just a H.S. Diploma, yet I'm a Senior Sales Data Analyst in my company. I got this career with Zero experience off of a Temp agency hire 7-8 years ago. I make over $30/hr and I get raises ever 1 yr to 1.5 years. The company liked me and my skills and I learned and grew, that's all. I've sat and spoken with people with College degrees and such and although I don't even care nor do I think I'm a better person than them, I can tell I was smarter than many and not smarter than others. What makes it even more odd to me, I'm just a black guy from a housing projects in New York, one of the first in my generation to even go to college, but I dropped out because it cost too much (Was a Straight A student, Deans list). My mother taught me from a young age to be practical and be scholarly but be good. She taught me school work before I even started school, which I started late at 8 years old. School does not matter, society has tried to force College into mattering and colleges want to seem prestigious because they want money. I rather be average intellectually but a morally upright and down to earth person than Mr or Ms. PHD and a snob. You can be both intellectual and moral, it's just harder to be both for many people because they either lose themselves in the degree or sought it to be better than others in the first place.
I read an interview with a woman whose husband was an officer in the Marine Corps back in the 1980s. This woman had multiple STEM graduate degrees and would be generally considered intelligent by most people. She said several of the enlisted marines who worked with her husband in Counterintelligence were some of the smartest, sharpest people she has ever met in her life. She said they were like warrior priests and could hold their own in debates with just about anyone.
In high school I found my dad's old college textbooks. I taught myself Einsteins theory of relativity, quantum mechanics, matrix analysis, calculus and elementary particle physics. After high school I joined the marines.
She would be correct. I was in both the Navy and then after 9-11, the National Guard as an Intel Officer. Unlike the normal advancements in the military branches, rank advances in Intel are tighter and it can take you a bit longer to advance. This is simply because you need to be extremely proficient at your rate (job) and because the number of advanced officers needed for Intel is much lower. A soldier could transfer out of Intel and probably advance up the ranks much faster, but once you "get the intel bug", you simply can't walk away. The amount of knowledge you acquire regarding all the different classifications of secrecy is insane and since most of it will be classified forever during your lifetime, you can't even give a hint about what you know or you risk going to prison for the rest of your life or simply disappearing if your knowledge of classified materials is expansive. Keep in mind, there are 2 levels of "Classified" ABOVE the President of the United States. These are "need to know" ONLY. This is the kind of information that if the President needed to know and was "read" into this information, our Nation and possibly our planet are nearing destruction. I have a friend who recently retired after 20 years in the Air Force. He spent 2 years assigned to a base that is very popular among certain civilian groups who investigate UFOs. I have tried countless times to get him to tell me if there are any UFOs or dead aliens in the basement of the facility but he simply smiles and puts his sunglasses on. I have even tried the "pulse rate" trick on him but he, like many of us, was taught how to beat that test. It freaks my Doctor out when I can actually significantly change my pulse rate and blood pressure while sitting still in her office hooked up to her machines LOL. Don't be too impressed as it is simply nothing more than a "parlor trick" per se.
I was in the military as a communications specialist, one day i completed an IQtest and scored 134, then Scientology tried to recruit me, told them to bugger off
I really feel bad for Tyler, I know that I'd get hurt in that situation, and I feel slightly hurt just watching this, as I've always wanted to join the Marines. I just hope he knows that he is respected. Thank you for serving our country.
My dad is a retired vet from the army and experienced the under appreciation for what people like him went through first hand, especially with his MOS as an infantryman that is known to be one of the most dangerous roles. The typical civilian in Los Angeles can care less about the deployments and PTSD not to mention the stereotype that retired vets are socially inept, can no longer think for themselves, and reckless to be around. Imagine going through two decades of hell only to come back to the civilian world full of selfish and ungrateful snobs..
@jerichocruzado I scored in the 94th percentile, and I thought the recruiter was going to have a damn stroke. He was practically begging me to go in for nuclear engineering. Didn't pass the medical portion sadly. Migraines suck ass lol. That damn recruiter has retired and still calls me a couple times a year to check in. I guess he got used to talking to me every day for nearly a year lol.
😂 she’s a typical “straight outta college” lab rat. Probably a research assistant. Doing little more than a paid intern. “Hey, Maria can you find that sheet with last weeks results again?” Maria, “ We make Covid test kits.”
“I’m very much dyslexic, I have ADHD, and I’m on the Autism spectrum” I get so pissed when people list their alleged mental conditions like they’re Pokémon cards.
Dyslexics are average IQ of 110. The majority of entrepreneurs are Dyslexic. The brain of a dyslexic person has learned to check itself for accuracy. The linear thought pattern is faster. The back and forth pattern is more accurate. Only severe Dyslexia is truly a hindrance because it affects the ability to intake information radically to the negative.
@@joelwillems4081if 90% of people were autistic, then it wouldn't be a disorder. It would just be a normal part of life. Like 90% of us are born with two legs and two arms. There would be no reason to list it at all.
My mother quit high school to care for her younger siblings. She read and liked learning. Years and years later she took a test that ranked her as equivalent to a college degree.
I don’t know how they’ve never met someone like Tyler during their life. You can tell he is extremely intelligent just by the way he talks and presents himself.
Social circles. I live in a country with large ethnic and cultural minorities. Nearly none of them made it to my friends circle. Kids that go to a uni, hang out with uni kids. and those are nearly all forced to be left activists, or get out and start a job from the bottom of the food chain.
Regular infantry men in any military doesnt require to be super smart to do their job, but military specialists (like in aviation, electronic warfare, comms, technicians) are on completely different level.
As a homeschool mom I appreciate your rants so much Brett. I have a friend who has a few degrees. She didn't believe me that a degree does not equal common sense. After awhile though she started seeing that some academic people can lack any sense.
Funny enough, my son is a student at Harvard. One of his classmates is a former Marine, and obviously several years older than everyone else. My son says that the Marine is one of the smartest in the class. He’s also the one of the few that doesn’t skip early morning classes.
24:20 😂 That’s someone who’s never been told the truth because the shake of the head. Instead of being proud of her accomplishments and knowing the IQ test is only a single metric test and Tyler is the best kind of person 😂 “I’ve never heard of that.” 🤣 exactly! He never let a room full of people who thought themselves better and seeing Maria get last part was the cherry on top *chefs kiss* 😂 nothing makes me laugh harder than that. Humble pie is the best dish ever. I’m happy with being a crayon in the box I’m not sharp 😂
I met someone who did 17 years of college. I've never met a more emotionally stunted person in my life. Additionally his grasp on the real world was almost nonexistent. Before that I'd always had a chip on my shoulder about not being able to go to college. Meeting him knocked that sucker right off.
SEVENTEEN YEARS??? PLEASE tell me the dude at least got 3 majors and a PhD under his belt instead of being too scared to step out of the academic bubble
@@RenRen2453 You just described him perfectly. He was being hired as Promotions Director. Dude didn't have a clue , but he was a friend of the owner. So of course there was a lot of clean up to do.
@@RenRen2453 p.s. most socially akward person I've met. I never knew what he was saying half the time. Not that he spoke above anyone. He jumped from subject to subject without finishing a thought. IDK if youve ever talked to someone sumilar. Its hard to decipher.
I love seeing this so much!! I have a PhD and I certainly do not consider myself the smartest person in the room. Getting your doctorate degree is nothing more than years and years of grueling hard work, research and writing. It disgusts me to see how many PhDs (especially the freshly minted ones) act with such arrogance towards any one academically lesser than them. I love how the Marine knocked her out of the park on the IQ test. The look on her face is priceless. It's good to be put in your place once and a while, but I feel that her narcissistic tendencies will just dismiss the score and still feel that she's better than the Marine. By the way, I salute you for your services on this Veteran's Day and any other day fighting for your country!
When I worked in the admissions office of a university graduate school, I dealt with a LOT of PHDs. The most arrogant of them were the "tweedy ivory tower" types, mostly in the College of Arts and Sciences, and the College of Fine Arts. The most down to earth ones were the professors in the College of Agriculture. They drove pickup trucks, dug in the dirt, and would come into the office with cow manure on their boots. They were brilliant, but they were farmers too. Responsible for putting food on your table and taking care of the land. Not pretentious at all. The Mining Engineering folks were fun too. The loved to blow things up.
Well, you might have a PhD, but you wrote "Once and a while", but it's actually 'Once IN a while', but then again, you might not be a native speaker of english, and you acknowledge that you're not the smartest person in existance, so I'm not hating on you, but just letting you know. And it's the second or third time I've seen this spelling, so it seems to be spreading. "Could/Should/Would of", is another one that irks me, because I umderstand it sounds like that, but once you read the actual spelling, and knows it comes from 'Have', how could anyone write it like that, it's not even english at that point, other than that those words mean something, just not what you're actually trying to say. And I'm not even from an english speaking country myself, but it still gets to me, when I see bad english. So no hard feelings, I hope, because this isn't an attack on you personally, but rather what I consider to be attacking a problem, and maybe helping in making it less of a problem in the future. Anyway, I've said my piece, and thank you for taking the time to read it. And I bid you a fine day/night/whatever, and peace to you.
Every marine I have met in engineering school and later in my engineering jobs have been extremely talented and top notch. During covid we had to distance in our work area, thus less people per shift. The former marines took the 4 am to 12 pm shift. They are used to waking up early & running with full kit (gear), so sitting at a computer T 4 am is easy for them. They are the real superheroes. Deep respect.
@@undead9999 They obviously didn't know what it was... also most of them are too uneducated to know anything other than what their Bachelors and Masters degrees are about... also they think being in the army is a joke... Sorry, but I've seen "Saving Private Ryan" and that movie (which war vets left the cinema cause they couldn't handle how realistic it was) has you sobbing even the 50th time you watch it... being a soldier is ridiculously hard... one bad decision is your death in war and combat... and this man is a specialist... not a grunt soldier...
@@sportschool3537just to add to that, he said he was a CBRN specialist. CBRN stands for chemical, biological, radioactive and nuclear. I have to argue that the infantry has the best critical thinking skills in any field I’ve worked in. Source: I got a 92 on my ASVAB and was an 0331.
@@MrBurklie People who view the military as "grunts" will never understand how much higher IQ and decision making ability you need to have to do that job compared to a normal everyday job... you're literally making decisions that have to do with the survival of you and those around you... no one's gonna die if a lawyer has a dumb idea... it's the same thing with people that work at the bomb squads, for bomb defusal... I have no clue how these people do what they do... it's insane what they do... standing next to a huge amount of explosives and trying to defuse it, knowing that one wrong move means you go boom along with one whole block of buildings... These kinds of jobs are the hardest jobs in the world... cause it takes a very very special kind of person to even be able to do them at a very very basic level....
As an Army vet with a Bachelor's degree, I can tell you from personal experience that spending a lot of time around engineering, science majors in college really dumbed me down and doesn't remotely compare to how much I grew in traditional and emotional intelligence when I got out and joined the military. Getting out of college and being an airborne infantryman around a bunch of 19-23 year old grunts who had no higher education, let me tell you, these guys were more well-rounded and intelligent. There is a certain type of person that gravitates toward the particular job I had in the military and social media and the current world we live in would have you believe the opposite of what is true. You have to live it to know: our world is biased and stupid because they are mostly misinformed sheep. Walk in someone else's shoes before you judge. Do your own independent research instead of believing the first thing you hear. Truly sad. And before anyone says that you only need a 30 on the Asvab to be an infantryman, I got an 82. So I qualified for just about any job I could have in the Army, yet still chose infantry. So did most others I knew in the infantry. Very high Asvabs, but wanted to be a grunt.
the only friend i had who had any military experience when i was younger he was older then me consistently walked me through his plans and outsmarting people what's really crazy is the guy was a postman when i first talked to him man was a postman of all things and he scores among the sharpest people iv ever met it really highlighted for me when younger that intelligence is not measured by one's position or labels but how smart you are on the move as it were.
@sureshenanigans9255 you and me both know a grunts gonna grunt brother. I know I told my 11B recruiter I'm either a grunt or I don't do it. I'm retired now but man do I miss it.
Except the asian guy who ranked first, he proved his IQ and education correlated. Considering that Ivy League schools penalize Asians, you know he got in by pure effort.
You encounter these people daily online. How many times do you hear “you didn’t go to college so your opinion doesn’t matter”? How many times have I myself heard, “you’re from the south so you must be a dumb hick”. I can go through a 2 day debate on a subject where my opinion is discounted, made fun of, and dismissed because of my locale. They get real quiet when I drop the bomb that I actually do have a degree. But I don’t include that info in my debates because it shouldn’t be a factor at all.
@@southernparadise9896 just like my sister in-law that used to say you don't have kids so you don't know what your talking about I have kids now so i now know how to raise them ?.🤣😂🤣
There’s a quote in Smokey and the Bandit, “what you know, and what you think you know depends entirely upon what part of the United States you’re standing in,” which is true for the standard IQ test, know as the Stanford-Bernet Test. They tested academics and then non-academics and their answers were fairly straightforward. Then they observed those same non-academics when put into different environments and given similar questions had almost a reverse effect of their IQ.
I think there’s a reason why engineers have two doctorate programs they can be a part of. The standard PhD that other fields possess, which is based upon theoretical research concepts, and the EngD, which requires the candidate to use concepts they have learned over the years to solve existing problems within the engineering field.
It is mind blowing that not a single person asked Tyler what the acronymd he was using stood for. They just assumed it didn't matter. You would think people who deal with evaluating information a lot would want as much information as possible.
It never made sense to me. I'd be curious because I woud like to understand what he is saying. You can't understand what he is saying if you don't know what that acronym means.
Most of them, probably except of Asian guy because he is a "white" man, are diversity hires after all, and their achievements are actually achievements of some forced, threatened or shamed male from their team
Wisconsin made it mandatory for juniors in high school to take the ASVAB. I can't remember exactly, but I think I got in the mid-70s, and the recruiter called me a genius and "would make military officer easily." When Tyler said he had a 96, I freaked out and automatically knew he was the smartest one in the room.
I scored a 79 on my asvab and they tried their hardest to make me a nuclear engineer. His score is very impressive so as soon as he gave that tidbit of info out I knew he’d represent himself well. Great job marine!
Same. Got an 84 and wanted the same funny enough. Wasn't high enough and then I began getting medical issues that ended up disqualifying me all together. Oh well. Another lifetime
a high-school buddy of mine was ranked #2 in our class of ~500. he joined the military because that’s what he truly wanted to do. the different paths we take in life are independent of any forms of our intelligence
@khangham9961 I've come across so many former military members who regret their service. They see it as, ''if I knew my government was going to do _, or if I knew Afghanistan was going to turn out this way, man I wasted my whole life for this'', kind of sentiments. I just find it strange how something someone truly wanted to do, ended up here.
@@requiemheidireprisal7824 I think the conflict comes in because people want to serve and protect their country, but the choices of the politicians don't always align with the goals and ideals of the country. For example, someone may enlist wanting to stop terrorists, and end up teaching in Ukraine. Or they sign up to secure the southern border but end up killing kids in Gaza. But this isn't just limited to the military. A lot of college grads end up doing jobs completely separate from their major, and even when you get a job in the general field you want, the exact work may still be different from what you want to do.
@@requiemheidireprisal7824my dad grew up without indoor plumbing, and my mom's dad was illiterate... I didn't have money for college, and I didn't wanna get into debt to go to college, so I joined the army. Now I'm a retired land owner. I have a great big house in the country, I have new cars.... My story isn't unique. I'm not special. Lots of people do the very same thing.
27:12 - PhDs aren't learning from teachers, at that level they're researching new knowledge. The bigger risk is getting too tunnel-visioned into their research topic.
An IQ test measures a range of cognitive abilities; the fact that she specialized in her education is quite smart as her "range" is already limited. The scope of her knowledge needed for her job is most-likely going to be considerably more limited versus someone in the military.
When I joined the Marines, I actually struggled. I scored a 93 on the ASVAB and was top of my class in highschool but I was humbled when common sense tasks were difficult compared to good ole boys with GEDs. The Marines helped me develop that missing part
Thats one of the best things about service, everyone's in the same shitty boat. Doesnt matter where you went to school. Experience and training matter and if you're brought up in the culture you can fucking thrive as both a person and a professional. Shit i feel like you learn more from being a service member, while yeah i know you can meet plenty of people of different cultures in college, its different when you're dug in with someone you see as family that came from another world. The shit you learn is crazy
I don't understand why people put down GEDs. Homeschoolers get GEDs. The majority of homeschoolers are much smarter and more capable than public school graduates. Have people not figured this out yet, that a GED is no longer "less valuable" than a high school diploma? That's old fashioned thinking.
I’d consider self educated the hardest, second is homeschooling, the least is following what many teachers do is so simplified that they say read chapters, answer questions in the book, and turn in your work and homework and occasionally assign book reports. That’s the entire school year every year until you graduate or terminate your schooling. Almost any semi educated person could do what many teachers do in their classes. Why almost any person, because some are emotionally unstable or dangerous.
I was a rotorhead back when I was in. I sent parts to the NDT shop while working in the engine shop, and finally earned my wings (one of the last home grown crew chiefs) after returning to the States. 20 years later, I was hired on by a company to do NDT. One does not necessarily need an engineering degree to do that kind of testing, but an understanding of what you are seeing. No book can teach you more than the basics. The codes one inspects to tells you what to look for if something isn't correct, and having the correct mindset for such work is better than just being book smart on the subject.
Semper Fi brother. I googled how to write software and earned ownership in the company for which I wrote that software. Now own 3 businesses. No college.. just a couple trade schools and spend all of my spare time learning new things. lol nowadays I don't touch code if I can help it.
"It's hard to move past the education level." Correction: it's not hard to move past it, you're just choosing not to. For whatever reason, I'm reminded of Qui-Gon's line to Jar jar in The Phantom Menace. "The ability to speak does not make you intelligent."
How do people not get this. Higher education in the US is profit based business. A student is literally a customer. Show a modicum of perseverance and they will pass you. Literally the only way to fail is to quit. Yet people think you have high IQ because you have a degree.
I worked in a lab with a guy who had gone to cal tech and MIT. He was a complete and utter moron. We also hired a few guys from the military and they were super capable and instantly able to handle anything we threw at them.
The fact that Maria scored about one standard deviation lower than Tyler makes me happy. And Software Developers should not be underestimated, that job takes a lot of intelligence to succeed in.
this sw eng. in the video, I don't know. It's my job, I met a lot of us in 20 years and you cannot safely rate us until you check the way we work. There are some of us that are monsters who write unintelligible software that works until it doesn't and at that point there's no way to fix it. So just being intelligent it is not enough. Also I wonder what kind of developer she is, the one sipping herbal tea in front of a mac or the one running around in factories integrating alien things to make them work against odds and humans.
I love telling people about my husband dropping out of high school in Australia and moving to the US and starting a 6-figure carpentry business in less than two years. It’s way more impressive than some degree. The work ethic and drive is unbeatable
agree completely. i was stupid and took time getting a psychology degree whilst my wife finished high school and has opened a fashion store and she makes wayy more then me. we also both got our IQ tested last year and hers was actually higher than mine. so strange how the world convinces you to spend years getting a degree you’ll never pay off when simply started your own buisness will get you way more money. congrats on your husband i wish i made smart decisons like him 😂
You can't teach drive and work ethic. That's separate from education. Even in tech, sometimes there are people that are innately talented. John Carmack and John Romero (iD Software), Steve Wozinak and Steve Jobs, Linus Torvalds (I don't believe any of them have a degree).
Right, I was a winger because I did well on the ASVAB and had a 100% choice in MOS. I chose aviation because fighter jets are cool af. The idea that marines are inherently retarded is so dumb. I was also in boot with a dude who scored a 99 or 100(I can't recall which one was this guy, but both in my boot platoon), anyway, he also had a complete choice and went 03 just like his two brothers. Dude was very intelligent. Just wanted to be a grunt like his grandad, dad, and brothers. Civilian disgust and disdain for th armed forced never ceases to amaze me. Specially morons like the PhD girl. Or scumbags I went to school with. Also I'm now an engineer...which is more than I can say for those who looked upon me active duty so poshly.
As someone who spends a lot of time around Marines, former active duty and enlisted, you'd be surprised by how intelligent they are at many things. Sure math isn't always their stronghold, but whenever it comes to real life situations and problem solving skills, they're some of the best there is. Get yourself a Marine friend. They handle stuff.
From my experience, people incredibly privy in academics, tend to be the dumbest people out there when it comes to experience and common sense. I’ve met so many people who excel in things such as math, physics, you name it, but have not one clue when it comes to street smarts or how to tackle life problems.
They purposely stress train us to make sure we can maintain a certain level of readiness during extreme stress. That alone goes a long way in life. But as we all know it can take a toll mentally which is why the military has the highest suicide rate of any profession.
Dude is a CBRN specialist. He's the guy the Marines call for help when they find a nuke or bioweapon in a battlefield and expect it to be taken care of while being shot at. I'd say those guys should be required to have a level of book smarts, emotional intelligence, and common sense that exceeds someone who's primary qualification is also the driving factor in their debt/credit score...
@@veronicab15the basically knuckleheads you call when your average grunt doesn't know jackshit about that odd looking container strapped with other weird stuff that looks harmful. Honestly without those guys. Many would be going home in slowly agonizing deaths since you didn't notice you contracted chemical toxins and other harmful substances
@@markwierzbicki5307 aside from CBRN. Intelligence unit also takes a ton of mental fortitude to be part in since if we're taking about cramming tonnes of data and digesting it down to key parts useful. You need smart jarheads for that since their the brains that gives feedback for command
I love that the individuals who won't "judge" Sean because of his dress and demeanor immediately negatively judge the marine. (Oh, and they did immediately judge Sean - just positively.)
If anyone ever tells me that they don’t judge someone I immediately don’t trust them. Judging someone is basically your opinion of someone. Sorry for typos, I’m drunk right now.
No the fact that they said they didn’t want to judge negatively means that their first impression of Sean was instantly negative. But they had to force themselves to change it. Tyler was the only one who, in true marine fashion was like “fuck it, I’ll say what everyone is thinking”
Everything you say/ mention, is exactly what I have been ranting about for as long as I know. Why pay to complete my PsyD/MD when you come out and can't even make it back; yet, still have years more of licensure etc. smh
As a homeschool graduate and an uber driver who drove a LOT of military around, I am so glad for the turnout of this show and am not surprised by the outcome.
Those people seem to forget that the biggest tech firms were made by college dropouts. I would rather have Tyler in that position then any of those other people because very few people are capable to do what he does
@@KerfaI Many states do have exit exams for homeschoolers. I considered homeschooling one of my children, due to his chronic illness, missing a lot of traditional school, and him being on the spectrum and was a square peg trying to fit in the "round hole" of public school. When he was 16, we got permission for him to take the GED, just as a baseline to determine what he was lacking. He took the test, scored off the charts and got accepted to a state university at 16. I worked in the admissions office of a university graduate school. I looked up from my desk to see two young men about 13 years old. I thought they were lost. They were there to register for classes. One was 12, his brother was 13. They were PHD candidates in our Biomedical Engineering program. They had been homeschooled their entire lives. Their 16 year old sister was also at our university. She was a 3rd year medical student. Also homeschooled.
They gave EQ as much credit as IQ, which makes Maria's intelligence even worse according to "herself!" Overall Tyler seems like the strongest of them. If I had an organization that needed this group of people as a team, I would make Tyler the boss in a heart beat!
EQ is delusional woowoo nonsense. IQ is the measure of your ability to process new information. That already includes emotional information. Don't be out here pretending astrology is real.
The crazy thing is,the Marine dudes EQ is probably MILES higher than the rest of them, because EQ is all about self control, self regulation, the ability to use your emotions positively and recognize them in others. Which has literally been drilled into him through discipline and training. They keep talking about EQ like it would discount him, but if they added in their EQ scores, dude probably rockets to the top
I don't believe in EQ. Your description is very spot on, but it simply describes maturity and social awareness. Whilst EQ and IQ have challenges in quantifying them, EQ feels so much more abstract and made up for the sake of those ones in the lower spectrum of IQ. I'm not a smart tool, perhaps I could be missing something in all this.
@@mgasukihanwa841 yes, precisely. Instead of accepting that not everyone has a high IQ, but a society has a place for them anyway and they're a valuable human being, we invent new terms to make people feel better. IQ to measure intelligence is flimsy but the best we got, EQ is academically still in research and there is no consensus if it even exists. There is plenty of people with average IQ who accomplished great things, remember yall, it's what you do in life that defines who you are, not what you were born with.
Ooooh! Homeschooled. THAT'S why you are so smart, clear, concise, fully understand what's going on in your videos reacting to how others act, have great commentary - Now it all makes sense. I kept wondering how someone so young was able to nail it in every one of your videos.
Prof Richard Feynman said it: “never confuse education with intelligence, you can have a PhD and still be an idiot”.
but this proves she has intelligence as she scored 112 which is in the top 79th percentile making her smarter than the vast vast majority of ppl. yes she lacks wisdom and humility, but objectively speaking, she has a pretty decent iq compared to the general public.
@@maximustrolleus9860 Genuine I.Q. Tests list ranges, not specific numerical values.
@@maximustrolleus9860 IQ and intelligence aren't the same thing, IQ isn't measuring how "smart" you are. So saying that just because her IQ is in the 79th percentile that she's "smarter" than the majority of people makes no sense.
If you get to see how professors interact with each other on a college campus this notion becomes more pronounced.
I just know someone, a very famous person in my country. A lot of degree but still dumb.
For anyone that does not know exactly what Tyler does, a CBRN Defense Specialist is someone that specializes in defending against chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear (CBRN) threats. The average Marine (those with the jarhead tenacity Marines are known for) will not qualify for that position. Tyler is a very intelligent Marine, and the others underestimate him.
I scored high on my asvab and this job was still out of my range, that man is probably one of the smartest Marines anyone will see
Thank you! I was wondering what exactly the job was. I figured it was something that required quite a bit of intelligence, he just didn’t brag about it.
I was about to say that. Lol
i should've taken that $9000 bonus for cbrn lol
While it does require a lot of knowledge it is more focused on adaptability and flexibility thinking so less about book smarts more on completion of the mission or goal I don't know if younger people have a new term but real world experience or street smarts. The books may say to do something one way he would have a simpler and probably better way to accomplish the task. Mainly from hands-on experience and listening to those who actually do the jobs instead of those who teach the jobs.
When I took the ASVAB got a high score on everything except the automotive part mainly because I never learned what the tools were called never was into automotive more computers and while I was taught to break into and hotwire vehicles by my father but ask me to change a tire and I couldn't do it until I was in my thirties.
I don't question my intelligence as I started freshman college at 15. But because of mental disabilities which did help in my intelligence my IQ probably sucks.
Funny how Tyler literally told them his ASVAB score of 94 and none of them knew that puts him in the top 6% of people
That’s what I was thinking as well!
Exactly. It's as though the PhD doesn't know how statistics work.
I scored 98 when I took the ASVAB... and I can tell that I've been the smartest guy in the room 98% of the time. ;)
@@ralphengland8559 i scored a 99 and was made to take it again as they watched me to make sure i was not cheating LOL i was 4Fed do to asthma and birth defects
@@rayzimmermin Same. Depending on the section, I scored 98 overall, with 1 section only a 93, and 2 others (math, science) at 99. We took it in the school gym as an entire class (600 kids taking it all at once). I was the first one done, and waited for something like 15-20 minutes, for someone else to turn theirs in (I didn't want to be first done) and scored the highest in the school.
Ironically, senior year, I was invited to take psychology, and scored the highest of both Psychology classes on an official IQ test as well.
I scored 140 out of 99, but I was drunk on vodka, and come to think of it, I don’t even remember enlisting…
I think it might of been the Russian version to be honest😅
Asking someone in the military if they think their job is something anyone can do is so disrespectful!!! The amount of not just physical but mental fortitude needed to succeed in the military is so commendable and rare to find.
Anyone can be in the military. Pulse? Check! You're in!
@@Borgassmord Glad to know that you joined the military. You know sooo much about it.
@@BorgassmordNot true, thousand of people are turned away every year because they don't qualify. The army and marines have lower standards though.
@@Borgassmord Nah i have mental health crisis and asthma i dont think i can
"We need to define what intelligence is."
*Rattle off a fair list of qualifications.
*Immediately only list people based off formal education.
The girl that told a Marine to his face she thinks you grow emotionally in college when he has the fortitude to walk into combat is the epitome of America right now. 🤦♀️
They regress emotionally because they are told how special they are.
yep they regress straight up their own arse @@lindaartz3297
I think fortitude has nothing to do with intelligence and everything to do with courage and willpower. That said... The fact that she said specifically 'college is where you grow', when the military the world over is often seen as one big frat house is frankly laughable lol. That is 'all' about the regiment you're in, that's been confirmed to me by literally every single person I've spoken to who was a vet.
To be honest, walking into a school in America has the same risks than going to war
He’s in the marine corps and hasn’t seen any real combat. Relax.
The best part about Tyler is that as a Marine, he will still defend those people who insulted his intelligence. That is a hero.
Not if he's overseas killing civilians in the middle east protecting the oil rigs in the countries the US has invaded under false pretense.
Following a staged terror attack to create an excuse for war.
But I get what you're trying say.
It's just a little naive you think the military is there to protect citizens.
@@IvyMay-qn2ysgood thing we don’t have to worry about that, that’s be bad
@@IvyMay-qn2ysyour comment is naive itself. Keep spouting bs.
@@IvyMay-qn2ysI think it's a little naive to believe that the military is filled with nothing but jarheads looking for an excuse to kill people. I didn't support the war, but what you're insinuating is very insulting to the many men and women who died so you can bitch about it on the internet. To be a warrior involves sacrificing a part of your humanity so innocent people can retain their own. That includes you. So use that humanity and show a little empathy to these people who have seen and endured more than you can ever imagine.
That is a chump.
Tyler’s EQ is off the charts. He is able to empathize with everyone placing him low without taking it personally. Maria is the opposite by getting angry about her placement. I bet she’d be at the bottom of an EQ test results as well.
yup. she is a narcissist and lacks self awareness. she puts people down.
I’d argue he’s just used to it from being in the marines. Leadership there is full of kids, who just demean their subordinates. Not intelligence, but submission
She probably spent all her life being told she's special, then in college, because she's a women and fits in the "diversity chart", she got even more special treatment and people walking on eggshells around her, it's not surprising she thinks she's royalty.
She cares more about image than anything else, you can bet she rather work for free in a prestigious position than be paid millions to do "real" work.
@user-er2nj3le5b that's such an uneducated nonsense comment. Either you washed out, are a self entitled wannabe elitist like Maria, or not from the USA, would have no way of knowing or backing up your statement and allowing your jealousy and envy to show.
@@ameliawester it's not submission if you've ever served. It's called tact and you learn how to be tactful with those around you so you aren't overstepping your bounds whilst not being too passive
I love how Maria was the odd one out in the IQ test. All had like 5 IQ from each other, and she was like 15 away from the rest.
She speaks of emotional intelligence while being completely unaware of how smart other people are around her lol
And basically insulting someone based purely on his career choice. When she asked if anyone could do his job, it was insanely disrespectful. She couldn't even run the drive through at a Wendy's, let alone be a Marine.
Bragging about your education and supposed intelligence constantly does not signal high EQ. Just saying.
Human beings, in general, are dumb, what we have is just "practice + repetition = learning". I rarely saw generative or creative human beings in my life. The number of them is lower than what you imagine!
Makes perfect sense
Plus she handles her relatively low score with a scowl and evident bitterness. Tyler was certainly perturbed by the assumption that he was low IQ, but he didn't throw a mini fit.
Imo being a defense specialist in the military at 21 is pretty damn impressive. He had to have worked really hard to get into that position at such a young age.
Yep. He stays on this path he's going to do life just fine.
Army CBRN Specialist here, it really isn't that hard to become a CBRN specialist TBH. Had several classmates that where 18 or 19 when we graduated AIT. Now, getting to the high level such as CBRN Warrant, Technical Escort, etc., that is impressive because those take several years to get certified and educated in.
@KillerAceUSAF just curious if you know the asvab requirements for that job?
@@KillerAceUSAFa CBRN cert for my MOS to certify cargo is worth about 5,000$ and up in the civillian world my MOS can get it for free and it stays with you even after you get out, the course is also really hard
I don't think that woman actually listened to what he did in his job, she went to s.w.m and military and assumed he wasn't smart.
Real insult to those who protect and protected this country. 🇺🇸
Tyler getting a 94 on the Asvab is the equivalent to a 1420 on the SAT. He's super smart and the people around him had no clue what getting a 94 meant.
Lol I got a 75 on my asvab. But you should have seen what everyone else got lmao. What can you expect when you go bang bang lmao
The ASVAB also measures a broader range of aptitude; more than just scholastic.
I got a 98 on the ASVAB, but only a 1390 on the SAT.
@@IanJenn356094I went bang bang and got a 99. Sorry to burst your libtard social constructs, but the highest scores and most advanced degrees in the Marine Corps selectively choose Intelligence and Infantry as the two most popular MOS’s. You should see what scores the genius liberal technocrat Robert McNamara was forcing into the Army during the Vietnam War. Watch Forrest Gump or Project 100,000/McNamara’s Morons…
@@duckmeister5385 Was that when the SAT only went up to 1600 or when it changed to 2400?
I'm a 12 year served Marine Corps 2336/ 6541 (Explosive Ordnance Disposal Technician/ Aircraft Ordnance Technician) Veteran. I can honestly tell you, that intelligence kept me alive and saved lives on the battle field. I guarantee that those people whos lives I saved, don't give a shit where I did or didnt go to school. Theyre living
Respect to you but we shouldn't have been in the middle east in the first place
@@christiansgrignoli3351 You're acting like bro gave the go-ahead to invade the Middle East😂
We don't argue, we do what we're told in the marine corps, buddy@@christiansgrignoli3351
@@christiansgrignoli3351and we definitely don't retire, so we don't have to go
@@christiansgrignoli3351I think most veterans who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan would agree with you buddy. Don’t take it up with our veterans, take it up with our government.
My father used to tell me, "just because a person has a piece of paper on the wall doesn't mean they're intelligent. It simply means they passed a school's curriculum."
One of my favorite expressions is, "You must be highly educated to be that stupid".
Yup and Iq does donothing
@@aaronarguijo8293iq is the best way too measure intelligence, it’s how we know animals are intelligent such as crows with thier problem solving skills. That’s why an engineer will be sent to mars too start a new human civilization where as a lawyer is worth as much as cow sht
Agree 100%
You can't get a PHD degree and have IQ of 70. People with that IQ usually do worse in life financially and in their careers. So having a PHD definitely is some sort of validation that you have knowledge and at the same time the Intelligence to adopt that knowledge and apply it... Not everyone can be Einstein...
Tyler mentioned he’s a CBRN specialist. That’s a hell of a lot of information he needs to know. It stands for Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear. He helps defend our country against those kinds of weapons, as well as cleaning up any hazardous material spills or accidents. Not an easy job at all.
If it's CBRNE then explosives as well
He also scored a 94 on the ASVAB. That means he scored higher than 94% of people who took it. And since something like 40% of people are graduating college now, and we have things like affirmative action and quotas, Tyler probably outperforms 90% of college graduates as well. Scoring in the 90s doesn't make you a genius, but it does put you in the higher echelons of the population.
Cleaning up that stuff doesn’t mean you know how each electron or proton interacts with each other or how cells develop. That’s why biomed engineers exist so they can make meds based off of it… it’s cool that he can do that but that doesn’t make him a genius
tyler certainly does not represent the average person in the military. had tyler been some average military personnel and the PhD person had a PhD in a more math/problem solving field, this would have played out completely differently. this jubilee video was likely rigged to play out like this
@@lwrncl8329Ok? It's still a good video to watch stop whining
Quite hilarious that Maria can't stop bringing up EQ, the ability to understand, use, and manage your own emotions in positive ways to relieve stress, communicate effectively, empathize with others, overcome challenges and defuse conflict, yet can't nail a single facet of it.
In fact, Tyler showcased his ability to do all of these things effectively. He was upbeat, took the negative with stride and saw the humor in it. He was direct and clear with his assessment of what intelligence is to him. He agreed that in their shoes he would probably view himself the same way, empathy. I don't think many words need to be said about a specialized marine overcoming challenges. He also diffused conflict by not taking his peer ranking personally inserting humor in a non antagonizing way. I am fairly sure he would SMOKE maria in an EQ score as well.
Yeah Maria doesn't have a very high EQ. Look at how she acted when she found out she had the lowest IQ. Definitely a touch of superiority complex and also some childish entitlement
Not to mention, he is a CBRN warfare specialist. His job is literally covering 4 fields of study, all while assessing his situation in combat, and doing it accurately. Not even bringing up the fact they also have to basically do the job of EOD as well if it's something such as a chemical bomb, as well as go through a medical training school to learn to counter and treat specific ailments that come with their field of study. From what I have gathered, they're the underrated SpecOp. units of the military through descriptions from 2 friends who are also CBRN in the Army.
Absolutely, no doubt at all
Fun Fact: Top psychologists say that EQ is not measurable, some can't even define it. It's a sum of other thing like empathy and collective awareness, and those are not objective traits as what we measure in IQ tests
@@thefall3n4nge1 indeed, that's the dude that keeps people from dying when Death shows up at the front door. He's gotta have brains and the ability to use them wisely. Military doesn't want robots, it wants people who can take orders, think and get things done without being micromanaged.
This is one of my favourite Jubilee episodes - this highlights many of the issues we are facing with the current education system; Plus, people who are/ were in military have my utmost respect. Ray and Tyler also showed the highest EQ in this group.
This is so funny to me because my dad always did and still does tell me “dumb people will always think they are smarter than you” and this video is literally the epitome of that 😂
That logic adds to the problem though. Even if the meaning and intention behind it is objectively correct.
Half the people reading this pronouncing epitome as "epi-TOME".
Dunning Kruger effect explains this phenomenon
The problem with these college educated and University educated people is the longer they stayed in school the Dumber they got
@@jaydavis9717The truth hurts is why you say it adds to the problem
As a former marine that ended up getting my engineering degree after serving, my experience as a marine prepared me much more as an actual engineer now ironically. My peers and I joke that what we did in school hardly ever reflects to what we do on a daily basis. Being able to work with a team and adapt to difficult situations is something you can't teach in school.
I have a similar experience (but I'm german). After finishing school i went to the Military as was every man in the day (draft Was still a thing). As a conscript I surely didn't have the most specialized Training, but I had to learn to work as part of a Team. To push my Limits. After that I made an apprenticeship and After that i studied to be an Ingenieur (Engineer).
I will not say that studies are useless, but I also agree that this Kind of Military experience helps a lot.
(P.S. I sometimes joke that I also learned that sometimes you are smarter than your superior but he still has the last say...)
Have a good day.
brett cussed :O
you can teach it in school, but they don't. trade school does teach team work and adaptation
agreed - came straight out of eng school only to be unprepared for the real world. Working at min wage jobs prepared me more for life than a flimsy piece of paper. Now I'm working in the industry doing what I love but it was a long journey to get here. Wish they teach life skills in school
My marine coworker is just like that. Amazing guy to work with. Absolutely hilarious and friendly. Not going to say what job I do, everyone hates my job and calls it the least intelligent job there is. But we all get along. It's all about how you work together and learn. Education doesn't always mean intelligence. That can be learned. If only the public can see that.
"I was educated once; it took me years to get over it." - Mark Twain
fr
Twain's sarcasm was hilarious. If you've never heard one of his speeches, you can find some on YT. He was an extremely funny guy. Another that there are no video recordings of, but you can tell from printed accounts was, was Ben Franklin. Churchill, when disdainfully told he was drunk at a party stated something like, "Yes madam, but you are ugly, and I shall be sober in the morning". Not too bad, either.
😂😂
@@MrJdsenior Mark Twain is an international treasure... the man was saying the truth in the most creative and funny way... the other one of his that is brilliant is "They tell me that because I don't read the paper I am uninformed... so I tell them that I'd rather not read it and be uninformed than read it and be misinformed"... hahahaha... brilliant...
I know this is an old one, but I love the quote: "A soldier is someone who has given up their freedom, for us to have ours." that applies to all parts of the world. So thank you for that.
This logic of "I went to college or I have a PHD" is like saying "let's all print diplomas and then the stupidity of the world will end"
A PHD is extremely valuable. She’s clearly just a brainwashed person. They all had good iq’s, but yeah she’s tragically woke
If everyone is stupid, noone is... (sad but true)
Studying in uni doesn't make you smarter. You eather can analyse things or not. I know many people with impressive degrees but they all got jubbed in cavid times 🥱
PhD= perfectly happy deluted
It used to mean something but not anymore
I love that not only did the PhD have the lowest IQ, the separation was dramatic. The top four were within 5 points of each other. Then PhD girl was 24 points lower than #1
and why is she trying to save people lives when the smartest person knows its better to kill people?
And bear in mind that, given bell-curve nature of the plotting of the IQ scale, once you are past the average section a small increase in the IQ number puts you in a much rarer category.
probably why she felt the need to brag with her PhD, she has no idea how anyone could succeed without simply following orders
And she responded with eq and whatever other nonsense it was. I were to break it down into 3 things I would say G which is affected by fluid and chrystaline intelligence.
@@petmensan EQ, although more is involved, most simply see EQ as the ability to get along, play well with others. While helpful not really related to actual intelligence at all, most dogs get along very well with most people as well.
I think Tyler exhibited excellent emotional and social maturity and skill. When the entire group unfairly judged him, he was still polite, respectful, and could have a laugh with them. He is able to understand their reasoning and bias, but it doesn't break him (like how maria couldn't handle being put last). I love at 23:02 he deadpan states what they think. (Gotta know your enemy) Not agreeing, not mad, just: this is the fact, and that's ok. He knows what he knows about intelligence. He also knows he was never going to convince them otherwise. Life was going to be their best teacher on that.
Imagine any other person there allowing themselves to be the quiet mistreated scapegoat like that.
They can’t even control their rude intrusive snickering.
EQ is emotional control and understanding, not having emotions control you and spill out everywhere unfiltered.
@@mokane86He was probably thinking, at the back of his mind, "I already know how this will end - me breathing in the same space is enough of an effort."
One knows damn well they are not going to charge their indoctrinated "mind" when you look into their eyes and realize that you've seen more comprehension while gazing into the eyes of a chicken.
I am a 78 year old retired Marine Corps officer. I was first an artillery officer and then a logistics officer. I had a nuclear officer secondary specialty in the artillery. I went to Vietnam and I endured some of the crap the civilian community threw at the military at that time. I went to college because I wanted to be an officer, but I didn't learn all that much more than I knew already. It was primarily a four year maturing process, but Vietnam matured me a lot faster than a four year college. I understood the civilian viewpoint ( I worked in the civilian world after retirement from the Marines and I owned my own business), but I was also very aware that those not having served in the military did not have the experience and education I did for getting through life; i.e., problem solving, leadership (I commanded artillery batteries and logistics companies of 200-300 people and was second in command of a motor transport battalion of 2,000), honor, integrity, civility, empathy and patriotism to the most wonderful country in the world, not to mention a sharpened amount of common sense. Many highly educated people have little to none of those qualities and are turned inward to their own selfish identity. It galls me that many of those who never served in the military, dislike the military so much. Freedom provides a flavor of life that those who have not contributed to it will never know. Until I know that someone has done something beyond themselves for their nation and community, I am not very interested in knowing them. My hat is off to the young man who gave of himself for something bigger than himself. Without him and people like him, America will die.
Tyler very casually mentioned his ASVAB score being 96 and working in CBRN which has two possible reactions
- Non military aware: “96 isn’t 100” and “What’s a CBRN?”
-Military aware: “96? Holy shit” and the general understanding that CBRN is about Chemical, Biological, Radiation and Nuclear defense and response
I got a 98 and they told me I could do any job. I wish I had gone into the military. Instead went to college.
The highest I've gotten so far is an 88, and the highest i've seen personally was a 92. 96 is just crazy.
I scored highest in my region...99. The recruiters came out of the woodwork. I eventually went in the Navy as an electronics technician. Got out. Got a Masters and went in the Army as a commissioned officer as a Chemical Warfare Officer. I worked in the same field as that young marine. So proud of our young soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines. It takes dedication. It takes nerve. It takes intelligence. And it takes chutzpah. If you really want to know if you have what it takes to be real and be of true worth. Take a job serving others. Be a nurse, a firefighter, a soldier. Serve your community and quit patting yourself on the back for your 9 to 5 and your degree that won't get you anything real.
GAS GAS GAS XD
@@anders4160and at this point everyone laughs at the guy (and there’s always one) who keeps his lunch in his respirator haversack.
I agree with the Marine guy's definition of intelligence. Information is useless if you don't know how to use it and adapt it to different situations.
If we notice he is even the only one who does manspreading... He is naturally the Alpha in the group, no doubt...
Man spreading? Lol
@@brenoricardo1450 do you mean mansplaining?
I would disagree though. He knows what he wants and what he's about.
@@brenoricardo1450military habit. He's basically standing at "parade rest".
That's a military speaking. His IQ is irrelevant if he stays ignorant or uses it in unproductive ways. Some of the most violent criminals have higher IQ than his. And he still chose to use his intelligence for war.
Tyler is a CBRN tech. That stands for Chemical, Biological, Radiation, Nuclear tech. He is there to train Marines and maintain sophisticated equipment to detect these types of weapons. He is very smart and did the Corps proud. I’m Navy so I love talking shit to Marines but he made me proud with his demeanor and confidence.
When it comes to a PhD, you are specifically honing your intelligence and skills to a specific topic. You could be extremely intelligent in those topics and very well-versed it, and then have no idea about how to cook and how to garden or even the latest trends. There are those individuals who have a very well-rounded intelligence and they pick up things very quickly. And that is the difference between holding a PhD versus having an overall high IQ.
I'm 3 minutes in and it's clear that the young marine is the most well spoken of the entire bunch.
Definitely the most direct and to the point, which speaks to me that he's someone who transmits information as efficiently as possible without wasting words xD Doesn't exactly imply high intelligence but it does say something about his priorities, which don't include wasting time chattering, and I would *correlate* that with a higher IQ
Because he has the most real life experience these idiots have been inside their whole life’s studying one fucking subject😂😂
@@Skystrike70 well put
He's also in a highly technical field. It takes a lot to go into a "hot" chemical environment, and if you screw up, you die.
I test high in logic, problem solving and spatial perception. I am terrible at math and writing tho.
He basically told people his IQ in the intro. The ASVAB is a type of IQ test where the average is a 50 and the top score is a 99. Scoring a 94 is exceptional. Take that intelligence and add in the training to make snap decisions based on factual information and not feelings, the dude is an information processing machine.
The top is over 100.
Please state your experience with this. I spent 15 years as the personnel database manager and the field for ASVAB score does not accept three digit values. @@JoeL91939
ASVAB tests practical knowledge. It's different from IQ tests which tests ability to learn. The language part of the ASVAB where they are looking to see if you'll make a good translator could be considered an IQ test of sorts since it focuses on pattern recognition.
The highest you can score on the Asvab is 99.
@@Sammy2g3 no, the highest is 139.
The fact that Tyler collected a pay cheque to learn and the rest probably took out massive loans to learn, instantly makes him the most intelligent.
Damn good point! It also shows his ethics that he was willing to sacrifice a good part of his life as a trade for the paid education. Those in the military will understand what I mean by "sacrifice" and I am not talking about the risking death type of sacrifice in this case.
This is somewhat of an uninformed take. When pursuing a graduate degree in STEM (specifically a PhD or Masters of Science), the general rule is that the student doesn't pay for courses. In addition, said student will most likely receive a stipend from their respective institution for teaching a course or performing research under a principal investigator. If an offer is made to a prospective graduate student where it is expected that they pay for courses, then it would typically be seen as a 'soft' rejection.
The fact that you consider selling your life a proof of intelligence disproves yours. What he learned was fighting and killing. And what does he fight for exactly?
for freedom and the right so you can make such a dumb comment like yours@@cedrichebert9584
@@cedrichebert9584oh nice questions... Can you ask those to Hamas please?
I literally love your opinion. I subscribed because you are fair to men. Marines are trained to be confident. Because if your company leader is killed, you have to be confident to lead; Not crawl under your desk praying for a Marine. I grew up in the projects, as a white kid in the 1970s. I was the 1st kid in my entire geneology to Graduated from college. I went into the Navy, then KSU. After being laid off in my late 30's I worked towards a post graduate online at PSU for GIS&T at night. I had awife and 4 kids to support. Now, I work for the FAA as a Geographical Information Specialist. When in HS my reacher asked why I was on the bus to visit a college. In the Navy I didn't get a school. My mom committed suicide. I just never gave up. I took temp jobs to get experience. Fact is college is not a guarantee. I suck at English and I do have a learning disability. I just never used it as an excuse nor told anyone.
I was a combat medic for 21 years, I have no degree but a shitload of training. I worked with a lot of very educated individuals and we would help each other which is one thing I loved about serving. Doctors asking me “how the hell do I do this” and at the same time I was asking “can you explain this to me”. There is a LOT of intelligence in this world that is overlooked by the ignorant ❤
Thank you for your service 🇺🇸🙌🏼
@@1amG1G1 ty Sir!❤️
I was a marine engineer in the Army, imagine that. Met plenty of soldiers with IQs well over 130, and able to master completely disparate skills rapidly, plus retain the information and skills for years. Also met some college grads that must have had their degrees issued in a Cracker Jacks box.
@@timclaus8313 yezzir! I worked with the Marines at Camp Pendleton and in Iraq as well, much love brother!
@@johnraygun9868 Two deployments in Kuwait making sure they got back to the States on schedule. Met quite a few services members, all branches, that were fearsomely smart individuals. Plus, troubleshooting skills and ability to adapt on the fly, was pretty much mandatory.
For those wondering 94 on ASVAB is a percentile score.
And his MOS has a GT score (basically an IQ) requirement minimum of 110.
So the military would have told Maria (112) that she's barely smart enough to even bother starting to learn Tyler's job.
That's actually crazy!! I'm not American so I watched this from the outside. My country is one with the higher Iq percentage in the region but 112 still sounds "smartes person in the room" even knowing that it doesn't necessarily mean that.
Personally I scored 108 when I was 18 and there were three people in my class with better scores. I don't feel nearly as smart as any of them. But people with lower scores still did good in different fields so I take iq more like a test to logic maybe(? I don't think that thinking quicker makes you necessarily smarter or anything and actually I really identify with Brett's statement about her and her brother. I'm in the same boat. Quick question to end the essay I wrote. Is it common to take an iq test in the US? I know you take AST and all that but I never looked up exactly what they are.
Have a nice day everyone!!
Ps my English is really rusty so let me know if I just murdered your mother tongue. Apologies will be issued
@@claudiosanchez764 the only English mistake was using the adjective "good" where the adverb "well" was appropriate, but the majority of native speakers do this. Missing commas (run-on-sentence) is pretty standard, too.
@@DrDeuteron thank you!!! I'll try to remember next time!
@claudiosanchez764
When I was a kid in the 80s, IQ tests were normal and most kids took them. When my kids went to school in the 2000s, it is something you have to ask for and pay for most of the time.
@@laurasomebody thank you!! If I remember correctly in my country it is done mostly in private school's and if they do it in a public one (my case) is usually just because we ask for it or because there is a teacher with curiosity and the willpower to organise it I think. I assume there is a margen for error in those tests anyway. Have a great day and thanks for answering!!
That is an old material; but the only thing I can say about Maria is that as soon as she realizes she ranks last in IQ, she contradicts her earlier statements and undermines the legitimacy of the IQ test ("there is also EQ, common sense" blabla).
She blatantly lacked emotional intelligence by bragging about her work and diplomas and by trying to humiliate Tyler.
This was a very satisfying backlash to watch.
She swallowed a handful of copium pills lol.
well we know common sense will be a weakness of hers as well so maybe the EQ whatever that is will be the thing for her. the tests only matter if she does well on it.
She didn't rank last though, i remember watching this video and at the moment she was supposedly ranking in the 110's as she said... and this was like two or three years ago, in which case, if being true, she is ranking higher than most people in the world, maybe lowest in that group of the jubilee video but higher than most people in the world...
Also makes me wonder about COVID testing standards 😅
100%
I graduated high school with an IQ of 143 and scored 99 on the ASVAB to which they thought I cheated on. Education is the ability to learn but is also a weapon for judgement towards others. If a person has no common sense then their education means nothing because they can't think for themselves and follow the pack.
I’m going with Tyler being the smartest and most grounded. His body language, eye contact, how he speaks, delivery of speech, his critical thinking. He can walk into a room and the gravity would immediately shift to his direction like he owns it and everyone in it.
I agree but Presence and Intelligence are not the same thing.
nah fr tho
He pointed out his ranking of the others in 2.3 seconds the time it took others to pick 1 person.
His answers were quick and concise, no time wasted.
A lot of that is emotional IQ, which isn't quantified on standardized tests. The Ph.D. clearly has a VERY low emotional IQ in spite of being intelligent.
@@JasonSmith-wj2ht There is no such thing as Emotional IQ
Because IQ Means Intelligence Quotient
The word you should have used is EQ - Emotional Quotient
There is no Emotional Intelligent !
That's an impossibility!
It's either / or. It's a spectrum!
You can not be both black and white on a colour wheel (Not to ge confused with race terms which has nothing to do with this whatsoever so don't even try to make irrelevant comments y'all)
You're either black, white or a shade of grey (there are many in between)
Emotional (emoathy) and Intelligent (rational) are two poles at the ends of a spectrum and there's a lot that goes on in between
This comes from Autism spectrum theory. The Systemiser (Intelligence) and Empathiser (Emotions).
Everyone has both but one is greater than the other. To what degree either puts you into more Autistic or more Neurotypical territory.
Women are a lot rarer to be in a Systemiser group / autism spectrum that's why women tend to be more emotional and more diplomatic (i.e. crafty and manipulative) and more social. And men tend to be more rational, straightforward and honest.
Men who lie and cheat are more feminine in personality.
I'm a woman and I'm on a Systemiser side and I value intelligence higher because I understand it. Accuracy and facts matter.
Emotions have their place but all I see from emotions is drama and selfishness and Me, Me, Me !!
I may be lacking in skills and lazy as heck, but make allowances for me because I'm oppressed and DESERVE special treatment and free money and gifts, just because, because "I'm worth it!"
And I'm sick of what women are being taught to become through the media brainwashing.
I'm glad at least men are resisting this BS
Others are weak. Probably poisoned by their contaminated water
Words cannot explain the joy I felt when Ms PHD came in last with an IQ within the average range
Iirc 112 is exactly one point above average... but I think my information might be coming from Eureka on sci-fi channel so I might be wrong lol
My iq higher is than her’s and I’m certainly no Einstein. 112 is pretty damn weak.
@@ph4t4lity06 eh what? the average iq is 100.
@@ph4t4lity06 Most people have an average IQ between 85 and 115. In general, an IQ score is defined with a median and mean of 100.
She only has a Biology PhD. Biology is the softest of all the Sciences. A PhD in Biology is nothing to brag about.
Maria telling Tyler his intelligence ranking has nothing to do with his background while in the same breath ranking everyone else on their educational background is so damn funny to me, no wonder she’s the lowest ranked in IQ. They are all ranking him on a completely separate scale because he said something that struck a nerve in all of them. Glad Tyler humbled their egos and is living proof your education background does equate to intelligence. Semper fi brother!
Yeah she's above average intelligence but unfortunately the way this generation thinks, it seems even lower because of those kinda talking points. It's all this farcical way of speaking that works amongst your own, but anywhere else, the real world day to day, people will think oh lord I'm getting away from this person. And I can't help but think characters like that internalize that rejection and have for years now. I'm polite and civil, but I definitely ghost when the red flags show up. They're just trouble, with absolutely zero benefit to yourself.
The fact that Maria somehow has an IQ (according to the internet) of 110 makes me think I might be a genius or something. Or IQ is just an inefficient way of measuring someone's intelligence level. Bc she ain't smart
Semper fi durp durp durp. Let's stand with Israel durp
@@03stmlax110 is just above average-which isn’t surprising because while it no longer takes a genius, it’s still hard to get a PhD with below average intelligence. But problem (and dead giveaway) is when you combine slightly higher IQ with a lack of humility (and in her case, narcissistic personality seems likely)… you get behavior and rigidity of thinking that looks very smart to those fooled by the act… and very irrational and destructive to those who see through it.
The reality is often more mundane though-she’s just smart enough to know how to puff herself up and get something out of it, but not self aware enough to know or see how idiotic that makes her look to everyone else. She’s neither super smart nor super dumb, just near average but misguided… and grotesque.
i think they ranked him to bottom bcz he is white straight male
I loved the reveal moment... it was powerful. And I wish more people appreciated the wit and resilience of those who serve or have served in the military - their intelligence, bravery and selfless contribution, to name a few more of their qualities
I noticed something about Maria that marked her as low intelligence almost immediately. She made most of her statements based on emotions rather than any factual information. The thing that gave her away was her “feeling” about intelligence being about examining other’s viewpoints. Intelligence isn’t about feelings, it’s about determining what is correct and finding solutions to problems. The proper way is to examine viewpoints and find out what is really correct, regardless of how anyone feels.
I don’t really understand how Maria could have said those things about Tyler. He had a certainty to his opinion just like the rest did, and he demonstrated a no-nonsense confidence in himself, but he more than anyone there also showed an abundance of considering others’ viewpoints. Even to the detriment of his own ego. Being smart enough to show humility and even a sense of humor in the face of judgment is a real demonstration of intelligence in my opinion.
She was also making it seem as if she was smarter than she really was especially when she was bragging about making those Covid testing kits blah blah blah you could see her gestures she’s so vain
5 of them mixed emotions with their thought process on the rankings, the two that held their emotions the most in scaling, are no.1 and no.5. My IQ is 124, and genuinely, I've seen more on the lower scale are successful. Education and achievements barely scratch intelligence scale as people who have great memories and learning ethics could get a PHD, and then it conflicts with their passion.
Also you want to end most problems in the world, this scale shows, only IQ above 135 should be allowed to vote.
That and it's just plainly obvious her depth of thought is very shallow. Plus, just how she speaks is very average, at best. Doesn't scream intelligence. I honestly think there's something to be said for being slightly lower IQ, or at least closer to average, making it easier to tolerate trudging through the monotony of studying the same subject with the kind of commitment you need to finish a PhD. It's 90% drive and commitment, not brains, in many fields that gets you across the finish line. My biggest problem was not comprehension or the work, I don't think I ever got a B in my life, it was losing interest in something and wanting to move on to learning more about a new subject I knew very little about. There's so much amazing shit in the world, I do not want to devote my life to going that hard in just one field of study. I know bartenders and gas station clerks and a guitar tech, all who have greater intellectual prowess than almost everyone I've ever known who has a master's degree or better. I die inside whenever I hear someone say, "they have a phD so you know they're smart.." Motivated? Absolutely, sure. Smart? Definitely not guaranteed. It's not that hard to roughly guess where someone falls on the IQ scale just by a decent, relatively quick conversation. And it kills me even more when I hear people make dumbass jokes about the intelligence of people just because they have a mundane job. Late night "comedians" are really good for those type of terrible jokes.
@@penmaster003it's because she's dumb. Lol
My dad graduated with a law degree from a prestigious school only to turn away from that career to become a farmer. He would always say, “Don’t let school get in the way of your education.” Still the wisest man I ever knew.
That's a true dad right there.
This probably sounds weird, but your dad and I would likely be good friends. I got indicted into the "gifted program" when I was 9 and graduated high school with a 4.0 and glowing recommendations from my teachers. Ended up dropping out after the first semester of college, and now I'm working your average 9-5, collectively working with my close group of friends toward buying some cheap land up north and homesteading.
Probably the best decision of my life, at least from where I'm currently at; I'm a lot happier now than when I was stressed out of my mind trying to do well in school, just so I could make enough money to live comfortably in one of the cheapest major cities.
U Graduated at 9? Hau?@@JenkemWatchman
I'd just spend time at a good firm and then retire early, can wait a few years.
I felt so bad for Tyler getting ragged on so hard directly and indirectly the entire time. They obviously tried to veil their bigotry, but they failed to. I hope he takes it on the chin and gets on with his life. Also, Thank you, Tyler, for your service. It takes a special person to sign up for the military in this day and age.
Why do you feel srry he knew it from the moment he heard their education... If he didnt he would be less smart then i would give him credit for.
Basically u can have an iq of 395 and have no degree and all people with degrees would rank you 6th... Cos people see intelligence as the piece of paper u studied for...
This is just the way the world works and lets be honest Tyler doesnt look like a soldier any1 with eyes and half a brain could see he has above intelligence... So that his skillset comes from his brain and not his brawn should have been visible from the introduction... With all due respect offc cos he might be fitter then me :-).
Im just saying if people are claiming to be so intelligent they should have noticed this from a mile away...
@@SL-mj2eq they should have noticed after he said what his job was, he is a CBRN defence specialist, if the rest of them are so intelligent why didn’t they think to ask what that was?
bro i been trying to enlist.. different branch tho
@@conorstewart2214 Exactly, none of them had a clue about military and didn't bother to ask. I didn't know what CBRN was either, hell when I googled it I type "seaburn defense specialist", thankfully google figured it out. If they knew what all he has to know, they would have ranked him much higher. Hell he probably know 1/2 of the disease stuff that the Phd does.
A special person to join the military? Have you seen "The Calling" recruitment videos? Good ol' Emma and her multimoms? The US military has no standards anymore. They're all about hugging and sharing feelings. There's not even yelling anymore. Just more hugs in boot camp. The US military is weak sauce.
I've seen this video before, and I agree with you. But I want to talk about your channel. This is one of the first channels I've watched where I didn't want to skip ahead. I watched the entire video and you gave commentary that I actually wanted to listen to. And stating your background showed credibility towards what you were talking about. You have a great channel and I will continue to watch it. Good work.
I love how throughout the whole thing, Maria was so cocky and her body language was so open. Then, when she got placed at 6th with a very low 112, she crossed her legs, closed her jacket over her, and just felt humiliation. Just love it.
If anything this shows that IQ doesn’t matter that much. She had an IQ a lot of people might have, above average but not insane, and is like a cancer research hero in society honestly. She was probably the most credentialed out of all the contestants. I think this video is meant to be like a dunk, but it really just shows that lower iq, as in not outlier high, can still have successful careers. Also don’t listen to cooper about college, college degrees are still like the best way to improve wealth in a family. Just don’t be stupid and take a bunch of loans, go to a local college.
@@dominicteneriello9977 I agree that hard work will out trump intelligence most the time. The marine may have been smart, but he also made some dumb decisions. College absolutely can still be valuable, but it's definitely not for everyone. My best friend makes 6 figures a year and only classes he's taken is to get his CDL.
My IQ is 116 and I’m 10 years old…
@@ClarabearabooNobody cares you ahsshat
@@Clarabearabooonly downhill from here now.
What still gets me everytime is the general elitism of the group and how completely unaware they are of it. Most of them probably spent a lot of time talking about the importance of inclusivity and being non-judgemental but when it comes down to it, they immediately fall back on stereotypes and personal biases with no hesitation. Seeing all of them be humbled to some extent is still very satisfying to watch.
That’s how it happens every time
So true! As I've gotten older I've realized that intelligence and stupidity exists in all corners of life, and you should always give people a chance to prove themselves either way. Some of the smartest and wisest people I ever met were restaurant dishwashers, enlisted military, etc., while some of the dumbest had high degrees.
Just shows the “inclusivity” woke nonsense is all hypocrisy bc it’s all inclusive until it’s someone from a group that doesn’t benefit them, such as the military.
I just love how the 3 most narcissistic people in the room wanted to talk about EQ being inportant, and all 3 were rapidly humbled.
Yeah M8 arrogance and self awareness do not go hand in hand
It's often the narcissists who gloats about being an "empath", as if they have been anointed with some extra special gift that is actually a basic human trait.
I have moderate dyslexia and severe disgrafia and I have been home schooled all my life and have a above average iq proving that going to a high ranked school doesn’t mean squat
Tyler admitting that that was the first time he had ever heard of EQ in his life is poetic lmao. I feel the same way.
Was it just me or did Maria's hair at the end look extremely dishevelled, as if she was pulling it out after the results, and quickly smoothed it out for the camera.
I would hate to be around her for the next few 27:57 no doubt, Tyler is living rent free in her brain.
And yet he was the one showing the highest EQ of them all. Whereas the girl who ranked last was bitching in her mind about the results. Sweet Karma haha!
It's because it doesn't exist. EQ is just a made up metric for or by people who are not intelligent, so that they can at least claim to have some kind of intelligence.
EQ is just a pity price for people who fail the IQ tests
It's not even a real thing. It was a term invented by a journalist.
My son got a 99 on the ASVAB test, he has an IQ of 145, he is an artillery officer. I got a 98 on the ASVAB test and i spent 3 1/2 years in the airborne infantry. There are a lot of very smart people in the military, we serve for many reasons. I am proud that I served and proud that my son is serving. Do not look down on anyone in the military, most of them have seen more or have done more in a couple years than most people will experience in their lives.
These girls must have been delusional to think you are stupid just, because you take part in military.😂🤦♂️
@@WoodysOpinion101 I'm not saying people are smarter because they have seen or done more, I'm saying that there are smart people in the military. In the video the marine was graded low because they thought that because he's a marine he must not be smart.
@@WoodysOpinion101I don’t think you read their comment… nor are you showing a high intelligence.
Can I ask why you (and maybe your son) is serving in the army? Curious :)
@@falkeborg9432 I've always loved military history. When school didn't work out after high school I wanted something physical, that's why I joined the infantry and the airborne. I was enlisted but I told my son if he joined he should be an officer. We both believe it's an honor to serve even though it takes a toll on the body. I'm 90% disabled but would do it again if given the choice. I was jump qualified, scuba qualified, small arms and explosive qualified, desert, jungle, winter and mountain qualified all before my 22nd birthday.
The Corps has taught Tyler to improvise, adapt and overcome. At 21 y.o., he’s light years ahead of so many folks with college diplomas. His ASVAB score of 94 ranks him with the cream of the crop.
my brother scored 98 on the ASVAB, a rarity I would assume, so I asked him right after he took the exam why not just score a 100? ...he opened up his Pokemon Ball that he takes with him everywhere and it was half filled with weed then replied "man , I was high as f**k, I couldn't be bothered." he joined the Air Force as a Crypto. I scored a 32, barely passed it..... I joined the ...i'm too ashamed to say, I'll spare my fellow servicemen the humility, but enlisting in the U.S. Military made me more hungry to learn and be more educated. I'm so proud of my brother, he's done is 20 odd years and retired and now in Med School for Neural Science.
I got a 98 too, there is no 100, 99 is the top. I didn't get my OUI waivers approved though, so I got a master's degree instead(which I WANTED to do for free, should've enlisted BEFORE I went out and got two OUIs)@@jasperfatty4915
Light years is a form of measurement and not time. 🤓
@@jasperfatty4915The ASVAB only goes up to a 99 for some reason. My recruiter never gave me an answer that made sense, and I scored a 91 on it. Maybe the answer to that is hidden within the scores above mine lol
The Corps didn't teach him though. The ASVAB is taken before you join.
I taught in public school for 38 years. The twenty years, the curriculum became a total push for college prep, especially in my area of Math. That didn’t mean they were teaching with better strategies, but they were neglecting basic skills for moving faster and teaching higher levels.
Tyler's EQ is probably the highest judging by how he handled all the darts on him, his personality, his choice of military, etc. Her face, sitting at the lowest IQ seat was priceless!! Then of course she goes to EQ because her emotions were hurt, her pillar collapsed so she had to excuse herself back up which leads me to believe her EQ score is probably low too. Once the others realized they weren't as high as they thought, they started making excuses, which proves lack of intelligence, critical thinking, and probably a lower EQ score if they were offended and defensive to that reality.
If we notice he is even the only one who does manspreading... He is naturally the Alpha in the group, no doubt...
To boast about your EQ means your EQ is low. You know, I wrote a book “10 steps to humility” but I got there in only 8 steps, I am so humble.
EQ score is some made up bs to make certain people happy about themselves. The ability to lead or be a good team member is not quantifiable and is only determined through experience. The PHD thought she had a good EQ. Would anyone want to follow her or the Yaley anywhere? Would you want either on your team? Would you hire either one? I hire people all the time and 1, 2, and 3 would be good picks if their skill set matched. I would not hire 4 or 6.
@@susanKWithAnEThank you! EQ came from some articake in a magazine. It is NOT recognized, nor can it be measured. Or, you could just say, Empathy.... SMH.....
The Marine’s credentials were excellent. The other “highly intelligent” members of the group had zero curiosity about the Marine’s qualifications or job. They didn’t even ask what CBRN stood for, or what ASVAB even was. They had already made up their minds that he was not intelligent just because he was military and hadn’t attended a university. Speaks volumes to their prejudice against others’ life choices, and their lack of “EQ”.
I bet they couldn’t even spell out loud what CBRN stands for even if they knew what it meant
Best comment I have seen. They had no apparent intellectual curiosity to learn about something outside of their own paradigm.
@@jtodd19 meh. I have no curiosity about the military either. Doesn't mean I don't have curiosity about everything I don't know, but people have different interests and that's fine.
They also don't have common sense. Cool you're book smart. Lol
@@ysf-d9i Okay well, the marine in the video was a Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear (CBRN) Defense Specialist. That is impressive no matter who you are.
Tyler is an absolute legend. As a person who grew up around retired soldiers and firemen, i would not be able to keep my cool as well as Tyler did. We should all strive to be more like tyler
You noticed Tyler when the PhD lady he crosses his arms in basic body language he closed himself off to her idea of education believing numbers are important
It's funny because Maria babbles on about being emotionally intelligent when Tyler is the one who displayed the most emotional intelligence out of all of them
We just have to keep this video up forever. It is one of the most satisfying videos I have ever seen. It would be great if someone who knew how to navigate the academic system could find her PhD thesis and publish it. I'm sure its grade school intelligence would be humorous.
i love how ray was ranked the highest and actually scored the highest but still seemed humble. he’s so chill 😭
He’s the epitome of his stereotype. 😂
@@Elladrilhe's asian. He didn't need to take the test to rank 1st. 🤣
She feels no humility. She are a college student.
He still put Tyler last, showing his room for improvement
@@ridesafealways4929 that's not true. There are some really dumb asians too. It's not automatic lol
As a military veteran with a GED whose IQ is about the same as Tyler's, this is so satisfying.
It's painfully obvious though without doing IQ testing whose smarter in a lot of these comparisons. And the thing about intellect is that it really does not matter. Being smarter does not mean more moral, nor better than anyone else so I find the whole conversation to be a dumb thing. Just like beauty, intellect within humanity tends to bring ego and pride which often than not makes people worse or harms them if they don't seek growth and self reflection. I'm a guy with just a H.S. Diploma, yet I'm a Senior Sales Data Analyst in my company. I got this career with Zero experience off of a Temp agency hire 7-8 years ago. I make over $30/hr and I get raises ever 1 yr to 1.5 years. The company liked me and my skills and I learned and grew, that's all. I've sat and spoken with people with College degrees and such and although I don't even care nor do I think I'm a better person than them, I can tell I was smarter than many and not smarter than others. What makes it even more odd to me, I'm just a black guy from a housing projects in New York, one of the first in my generation to even go to college, but I dropped out because it cost too much (Was a Straight A student, Deans list). My mother taught me from a young age to be practical and be scholarly but be good. She taught me school work before I even started school, which I started late at 8 years old. School does not matter, society has tried to force College into mattering and colleges want to seem prestigious because they want money.
I rather be average intellectually but a morally upright and down to earth person than Mr or Ms. PHD and a snob. You can be both intellectual and moral, it's just harder to be both for many people because they either lose themselves in the degree or sought it to be better than others in the first place.
One vet to another, thank you for your service.
@@motocrossstig6467 Thanks. Same to you, brother.
I read an interview with a woman whose husband was an officer in the Marine Corps back in the 1980s. This woman had multiple STEM graduate degrees and would be generally considered intelligent by most people. She said several of the enlisted marines who worked with her husband in Counterintelligence were some of the smartest, sharpest people she has ever met in her life. She said they were like warrior priests and could hold their own in debates with just about anyone.
In high school I found my dad's old college textbooks. I taught myself Einsteins theory of relativity, quantum mechanics, matrix analysis, calculus and elementary particle physics. After high school I joined the marines.
Name of the interview?
Would love to see that interview as well! What was the title?
She would be correct. I was in both the Navy and then after 9-11, the National Guard as an Intel Officer. Unlike the normal advancements in the military branches, rank advances in Intel are tighter and it can take you a bit longer to advance. This is simply because you need to be extremely proficient at your rate (job) and because the number of advanced officers needed for Intel is much lower. A soldier could transfer out of Intel and probably advance up the ranks much faster, but once you "get the intel bug", you simply can't walk away.
The amount of knowledge you acquire regarding all the different classifications of secrecy is insane and since most of it will be classified forever during your lifetime, you can't even give a hint about what you know or you risk going to prison for the rest of your life or simply disappearing if your knowledge of classified materials is expansive.
Keep in mind, there are 2 levels of "Classified" ABOVE the President of the United States. These are "need to know" ONLY. This is the kind of information that if the President needed to know and was "read" into this information, our Nation and possibly our planet are nearing destruction.
I have a friend who recently retired after 20 years in the Air Force. He spent 2 years assigned to a base that is very popular among certain civilian groups who investigate UFOs. I have tried countless times to get him to tell me if there are any UFOs or dead aliens in the basement of the facility but he simply smiles and puts his sunglasses on. I have even tried the "pulse rate" trick on him but he, like many of us, was taught how to beat that test.
It freaks my Doctor out when I can actually significantly change my pulse rate and blood pressure while sitting still in her office hooked up to her machines LOL. Don't be too impressed as it is simply nothing more than a "parlor trick" per se.
I was in the military as a communications specialist, one day i completed an IQtest and scored 134, then Scientology tried to recruit me, told them to bugger off
No you didnt.
@@samueliam745 yes
@@Bohemiahotrodandcustom No sale.
@@samueliam745 walk away, nothing to see here
I really feel bad for Tyler, I know that I'd get hurt in that situation, and I feel slightly hurt just watching this, as I've always wanted to join the Marines. I just hope he knows that he is respected. Thank you for serving our country.
dude's ASVAB def gets him a ton of respect in the circles that matter
My dad is a retired vet from the army and experienced the under appreciation for what people like him went through first hand, especially with his MOS as an infantryman that is known to be one of the most dangerous roles. The typical civilian in Los Angeles can care less about the deployments and PTSD not to mention the stereotype that retired vets are socially inept, can no longer think for themselves, and reckless to be around. Imagine going through two decades of hell only to come back to the civilian world full of selfish and ungrateful snobs..
I would think that one of the requirements to be an effective marine would be emotional resilience.
@jerichocruzado I scored in the 94th percentile, and I thought the recruiter was going to have a damn stroke. He was practically begging me to go in for nuclear engineering. Didn't pass the medical portion sadly. Migraines suck ass lol. That damn recruiter has retired and still calls me a couple times a year to check in. I guess he got used to talking to me every day for nearly a year lol.
Turns out Maria is the receptionist for the biotech company 😂
😂 she’s a typical “straight outta college” lab rat. Probably a research assistant. Doing little more than a paid intern.
“Hey, Maria can you find that sheet with last weeks results again?”
Maria, “ We make Covid test kits.”
Really? What a shock! 😀
How did you find that out?
Answer the man, tell us how you found that out.
Fake news but she might as will be working as a receptionist 😂
“I’m very much dyslexic, I have ADHD, and I’m on the Autism spectrum” I get so pissed when people list their alleged mental conditions like they’re Pokémon cards.
90% of us are somewhere on the autism spectrum or could be diagnosed with ADHD. The dyslexic can make learning quite difficult.
Dyslexics are average IQ of 110. The majority of entrepreneurs are Dyslexic. The brain of a dyslexic person has learned to check itself for accuracy. The linear thought pattern is faster. The back and forth pattern is more accurate.
Only severe Dyslexia is truly a hindrance because it affects the ability to intake information radically to the negative.
@@joelwillems4081if 90% of people were autistic, then it wouldn't be a disorder. It would just be a normal part of life. Like 90% of us are born with two legs and two arms. There would be no reason to list it at all.
👏@@coneyandfriends3618
@@coneyandfriends3618fax lol
My mother quit high school to care for her younger siblings. She read and liked learning. Years and years later she took a test that ranked her as equivalent to a college degree.
I don’t know how they’ve never met someone like Tyler during their life. You can tell he is extremely intelligent just by the way he talks and presents himself.
He doesn't come off as smart, more autistic than anything.
Gives me Ben Shapiro vibes
Social circles. I live in a country with large ethnic and cultural minorities. Nearly none of them made it to my friends circle. Kids that go to a uni, hang out with uni kids. and those are nearly all forced to be left activists, or get out and start a job from the bottom of the food chain.
Regular infantry men in any military doesnt require to be super smart to do their job, but military specialists (like in aviation, electronic warfare, comms, technicians) are on completely different level.
As a homeschool mom I appreciate your rants so much Brett. I have a friend who has a few degrees. She didn't believe me that a degree does not equal common sense. After awhile though she started seeing that some academic people can lack any sense.
So true miss Pricilla, They don't teach horse sense in school. They should.
My mother who homeschooled me, certainly does. I see a lot of similarities between my mother and Brett, it’s probably why I’m so fond of her.
Most home schooled children I have interacted with are smarter, more advanced than any public or private school child. Not anecdotal
@@TraumaGuru74 Basing a belief on ones personal account of something is the very definition of anecdotal.
Funny enough, my son is a student at Harvard. One of his classmates is a former Marine, and obviously several years older than everyone else. My son says that the Marine is one of the smartest in the class. He’s also the one of the few that doesn’t skip early morning classes.
24:20 😂 That’s someone who’s never been told the truth because the shake of the head. Instead of being proud of her accomplishments and knowing the IQ test is only a single metric test and Tyler is the best kind of person 😂 “I’ve never heard of that.” 🤣 exactly! He never let a room full of people who thought themselves better and seeing Maria get last part was the cherry on top *chefs kiss* 😂 nothing makes me laugh harder than that. Humble pie is the best dish ever. I’m happy with being a crayon in the box I’m not sharp 😂
I met someone who did 17 years of college. I've never met a more emotionally stunted person in my life. Additionally his grasp on the real world was almost nonexistent.
Before that I'd always had a chip on my shoulder about not being able to go to college. Meeting him knocked that sucker right off.
SEVENTEEN years of college????
SEVENTEEN YEARS??? PLEASE tell me the dude at least got 3 majors and a PhD under his belt instead of being too scared to step out of the academic bubble
@@RenRen2453 You just described him perfectly. He was being hired as Promotions Director. Dude didn't have a clue , but he was a friend of the owner. So of course there was a lot of clean up to do.
@@rachelciel3330 Oh yeah. My boss knew I'd felt bad about not going so he let me sit in the interview. Changed my mind about college then and there.
@@RenRen2453 p.s. most socially akward person I've met. I never knew what he was saying half the time. Not that he spoke above anyone. He jumped from subject to subject without finishing a thought. IDK if youve ever talked to someone sumilar. Its hard to decipher.
I love seeing this so much!! I have a PhD and I certainly do not consider myself the smartest person in the room. Getting your doctorate degree is nothing more than years and years of grueling hard work, research and writing. It disgusts me to see how many PhDs (especially the freshly minted ones) act with such arrogance towards any one academically lesser than them. I love how the Marine knocked her out of the park on the IQ test. The look on her face is priceless. It's good to be put in your place once and a while, but I feel that her narcissistic tendencies will just dismiss the score and still feel that she's better than the Marine. By the way, I salute you for your services on this Veteran's Day and any other day fighting for your country!
When I worked in the admissions office of a university graduate school, I dealt with a LOT of PHDs. The most arrogant of them were the "tweedy ivory tower" types, mostly in the College of Arts and Sciences, and the College of Fine Arts. The most down to earth ones were the professors in the College of Agriculture. They drove pickup trucks, dug in the dirt, and would come into the office with cow manure on their boots. They were brilliant, but they were farmers too. Responsible for putting food on your table and taking care of the land. Not pretentious at all. The Mining Engineering folks were fun too. The loved to blow things up.
Well, you might have a PhD, but you wrote "Once and a while", but it's actually 'Once IN a while', but then again, you might not be a native speaker of english, and you acknowledge that you're not the smartest person in existance, so I'm not hating on you, but just letting you know. And it's the second or third time I've seen this spelling, so it seems to be spreading. "Could/Should/Would of", is another one that irks me, because I umderstand it sounds like that, but once you read the actual spelling, and knows it comes from 'Have', how could anyone write it like that, it's not even english at that point, other than that those words mean something, just not what you're actually trying to say. And I'm not even from an english speaking country myself, but it still gets to me, when I see bad english. So no hard feelings, I hope, because this isn't an attack on you personally, but rather what I consider to be attacking a problem, and maybe helping in making it less of a problem in the future. Anyway, I've said my piece, and thank you for taking the time to read it. And I bid you a fine day/night/whatever, and peace to you.
In the full video, she did precisely that.
She should have seen it coming if she knew anything about the ASVAB at all. 94 is quite high.
Every marine I have met in engineering school and later in my engineering jobs have been extremely talented and top notch. During covid we had to distance in our work area, thus less people per shift. The former marines took the 4 am to 12 pm shift. They are used to waking up early & running with full kit (gear), so sitting at a computer T 4 am is easy for them. They are the real superheroes. Deep respect.
Thanks.
I just love that Tyler said “… villain redemption arc.”
Asvab of 94 ? That guy is an astronaut, Marines should be glad he chose the Corp.
Facts! You know every branch was after him!
@michaeldeason1906 the facf that none of the supposed "smart ones" picked up on that is hilarious and shows their bias
@@undead9999 They obviously didn't know what it was... also most of them are too uneducated to know anything other than what their Bachelors and Masters degrees are about... also they think being in the army is a joke... Sorry, but I've seen "Saving Private Ryan" and that movie (which war vets left the cinema cause they couldn't handle how realistic it was) has you sobbing even the 50th time you watch it... being a soldier is ridiculously hard... one bad decision is your death in war and combat... and this man is a specialist... not a grunt soldier...
@@sportschool3537just to add to that, he said he was a CBRN specialist. CBRN stands for chemical, biological, radioactive and nuclear. I have to argue that the infantry has the best critical thinking skills in any field I’ve worked in. Source: I got a 92 on my ASVAB and was an 0331.
@@MrBurklie People who view the military as "grunts" will never understand how much higher IQ and decision making ability you need to have to do that job compared to a normal everyday job... you're literally making decisions that have to do with the survival of you and those around you... no one's gonna die if a lawyer has a dumb idea... it's the same thing with people that work at the bomb squads, for bomb defusal... I have no clue how these people do what they do... it's insane what they do... standing next to a huge amount of explosives and trying to defuse it, knowing that one wrong move means you go boom along with one whole block of buildings...
These kinds of jobs are the hardest jobs in the world... cause it takes a very very special kind of person to even be able to do them at a very very basic level....
As an Army vet with a Bachelor's degree, I can tell you from personal experience that spending a lot of time around engineering, science majors in college really dumbed me down and doesn't remotely compare to how much I grew in traditional and emotional intelligence when I got out and joined the military.
Getting out of college and being an airborne infantryman around a bunch of 19-23 year old grunts who had no higher education, let me tell you, these guys were more well-rounded and intelligent. There is a certain type of person that gravitates toward the particular job I had in the military and social media and the current world we live in would have you believe the opposite of what is true. You have to live it to know: our world is biased and stupid because they are mostly misinformed sheep. Walk in someone else's shoes before you judge. Do your own independent research instead of believing the first thing you hear. Truly sad.
And before anyone says that you only need a 30 on the Asvab to be an infantryman, I got an 82. So I qualified for just about any job I could have in the Army, yet still chose infantry. So did most others I knew in the infantry. Very high Asvabs, but wanted to be a grunt.
the only friend i had who had any military experience when i was younger he was older then me consistently walked me through his plans and outsmarting people what's really crazy is the guy was a postman when i first talked to him man was a postman of all things and he scores among the sharpest people iv ever met it really highlighted for me when younger that intelligence is not measured by one's position or labels but how smart you are on the move as it were.
"Semper Fi," Brother
If I could do it all again, I'd love it.
I enjoy being underestimated while I eat my crayons, though.
@@kirkoglesby6175 🤣
@sureshenanigans9255 you and me both know a grunts gonna grunt brother. I know I told my 11B recruiter I'm either a grunt or I don't do it. I'm retired now but man do I miss it.
I’m surprised that these students did not realize, even after taking the IQ test, that education level has little to nothing to do with your IQ.
Except the asian guy who ranked first, he proved his IQ and education correlated. Considering that Ivy League schools penalize Asians, you know he got in by pure effort.
IQ is the ability to learn. A degree is based upon your ability to repeat the stupidity of your professors. An absolute moron can earn a degree.
You encounter these people daily online. How many times do you hear “you didn’t go to college so your opinion doesn’t matter”? How many times have I myself heard, “you’re from the south so you must be a dumb hick”. I can go through a 2 day debate on a subject where my opinion is discounted, made fun of, and dismissed because of my locale. They get real quiet when I drop the bomb that I actually do have a degree. But I don’t include that info in my debates because it shouldn’t be a factor at all.
@@southernparadise9896 just like my sister in-law that used to say you don't have kids so you don't know what your talking about I have kids now so i now know how to raise them ?.🤣😂🤣
That's is the greatest of ironies.
There’s a quote in Smokey and the Bandit, “what you know, and what you think you know depends entirely upon what part of the United States you’re standing in,” which is true for the standard IQ test, know as the Stanford-Bernet Test. They tested academics and then non-academics and their answers were fairly straightforward. Then they observed those same non-academics when put into different environments and given similar questions had almost a reverse effect of their IQ.
I think there’s a reason why engineers have two doctorate programs they can be a part of. The standard PhD that other fields possess, which is based upon theoretical research concepts, and the EngD, which requires the candidate to use concepts they have learned over the years to solve existing problems within the engineering field.
It is mind blowing that not a single person asked Tyler what the acronymd he was using stood for. They just assumed it didn't matter. You would think people who deal with evaluating information a lot would want as much information as possible.
It never made sense to me. I'd be curious because I woud like to understand what he is saying. You can't understand what he is saying if you don't know what that acronym means.
Most of them, probably except of Asian guy because he is a "white" man, are diversity hires after all, and their achievements are actually achievements of some forced, threatened or shamed male from their team
Or they just pretended like they know what it is to seem smart lol
Even if I _think_ I know the acronym, I'll ask because there's so many acronyms I can't keep track of them
Wisconsin made it mandatory for juniors in high school to take the ASVAB. I can't remember exactly, but I think I got in the mid-70s, and the recruiter called me a genius and "would make military officer easily." When Tyler said he had a 96, I freaked out and automatically knew he was the smartest one in the room.
I scored a 79 on my asvab and they tried their hardest to make me a nuclear engineer. His score is very impressive so as soon as he gave that tidbit of info out I knew he’d represent himself well. Great job marine!
79 isn't high enough for the nuclear program
That sounds cool
@@lukeut8680 maybe the exam changed trough time
I got a 98 and still to this day get calls from the Navy for the position.
Same. Got an 84 and wanted the same funny enough. Wasn't high enough and then I began getting medical issues that ended up disqualifying me all together. Oh well. Another lifetime
a high-school buddy of mine was ranked #2 in our class of ~500. he joined the military because that’s what he truly wanted to do. the different paths we take in life are independent of any forms of our intelligence
@khangham9961 I've come across so many former military members who regret their service. They see it as, ''if I knew my government was going to do _, or if I knew Afghanistan was going to turn out this way, man I wasted my whole life for this'', kind of sentiments. I just find it strange how something someone truly wanted to do, ended up here.
O
@@requiemheidireprisal7824 I think the conflict comes in because people want to serve and protect their country, but the choices of the politicians don't always align with the goals and ideals of the country. For example, someone may enlist wanting to stop terrorists, and end up teaching in Ukraine. Or they sign up to secure the southern border but end up killing kids in Gaza.
But this isn't just limited to the military. A lot of college grads end up doing jobs completely separate from their major, and even when you get a job in the general field you want, the exact work may still be different from what you want to do.
@@requiemheidireprisal7824my dad grew up without indoor plumbing, and my mom's dad was illiterate... I didn't have money for college, and I didn't wanna get into debt to go to college, so I joined the army. Now I'm a retired land owner. I have a great big house in the country, I have new cars.... My story isn't unique. I'm not special. Lots of people do the very same thing.
@@Theggman83 That's neat, if you wish to share something next time, don't include my name thanks.
27:12 - PhDs aren't learning from teachers, at that level they're researching new knowledge. The bigger risk is getting too tunnel-visioned into their research topic.
Maria is a perfect example of someone who is educated beyond the level of their intelligence.
An IQ test measures a range of cognitive abilities; the fact that she specialized in her education is quite smart as her "range" is already limited. The scope of her knowledge needed for her job is most-likely going to be considerably more limited versus someone in the military.
"The winner is M..a..r..i.."
Maria "I knew it I WON!!! 💃🏻"
"..n..e..MARINE!"
Maria "😮😲😫😩😢😠😡🤬IQ tests are rigged!"
AGREE 100%
When I joined the Marines, I actually struggled. I scored a 93 on the ASVAB and was top of my class in highschool but I was humbled when common sense tasks were difficult compared to good ole boys with GEDs. The Marines helped me develop that missing part
Thank you and your family for your service and sacrifice!
Semper Fi, brother.
Thats one of the best things about service, everyone's in the same shitty boat. Doesnt matter where you went to school. Experience and training matter and if you're brought up in the culture you can fucking thrive as both a person and a professional. Shit i feel like you learn more from being a service member, while yeah i know you can meet plenty of people of different cultures in college, its different when you're dug in with someone you see as family that came from another world. The shit you learn is crazy
I don't understand why people put down GEDs. Homeschoolers get GEDs. The majority of homeschoolers are much smarter and more capable than public school graduates. Have people not figured this out yet, that a GED is no longer "less valuable" than a high school diploma? That's old fashioned thinking.
I’d consider self educated the hardest, second is homeschooling, the least is following what many teachers do is so simplified that they say read chapters, answer questions in the book, and turn in your work and homework and occasionally assign book reports. That’s the entire school year every year until you graduate or terminate your schooling.
Almost any semi educated person could do what many teachers do in their classes. Why almost any person, because some are emotionally unstable or dangerous.
Intelligence without wisdom is only a well spoken fool.
Wisely said!
and some people dont even have that mannerism ...
Tell that to a democrat
you don't know what it's like to think up answers to questions you woułd never conceptualize
@@ikstees666 what?
I had a PhD friend tell me that PhD is a measure of persistence, not intelligence.
This is fascinating. I'm a former Marine. I only have a high school diploma. But I'm now a self-taught Software Engineer.
A fancy degree on your wall in a frame doesn't make you smart. What you DO makes you smart.
I was a rotorhead back when I was in. I sent parts to the NDT shop while working in the engine shop, and finally earned my wings (one of the last home grown crew chiefs) after returning to the States. 20 years later, I was hired on by a company to do NDT. One does not necessarily need an engineering degree to do that kind of testing, but an understanding of what you are seeing. No book can teach you more than the basics. The codes one inspects to tells you what to look for if something isn't correct, and having the correct mindset for such work is better than just being book smart on the subject.
No such thing as a "former" Marine, Marine. But your comment is...... Motivational. Semper Fi
Semper Fi brother. I googled how to write software and earned ownership in the company for which I wrote that software. Now own 3 businesses. No college.. just a couple trade schools and spend all of my spare time learning new things. lol nowadays I don't touch code if I can help it.
Being self-taught is admirable; however a CS degree is worth something too, you have learned how, you've not learned why the how came to be.
“You pay for education. Education doesn’t equal intelligence,” said the fellow Marine.
“Rah” (using my Marine brother voice) 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
facts coming from a fellow marine
"It's hard to move past the education level."
Correction: it's not hard to move past it, you're just choosing not to.
For whatever reason, I'm reminded of Qui-Gon's line to Jar jar in The Phantom Menace.
"The ability to speak does not make you intelligent."
How do people not get this. Higher education in the US is profit based business. A student is literally a customer. Show a modicum of perseverance and they will pass you. Literally the only way to fail is to quit. Yet people think you have high IQ because you have a degree.
Tyler is a legend, he doesn't take any of the criticism personally and is very respectful about everything
I worked in a lab with a guy who had gone to cal tech and MIT. He was a complete and utter moron. We also hired a few guys from the military and they were super capable and instantly able to handle anything we threw at them.
The fact that Maria scored about one standard deviation lower than Tyler makes me happy. And Software Developers should not be underestimated, that job takes a lot of intelligence to succeed in.
Software developers are a different kind of breed. They have a different way to look at and solve a problem.
Software development takes a lot of IQ not necessarily raw intelligence. IQ is computing power which is an absolute must for programming.
@@mbrown7325Yeah. Furthermore, it's crazy how complex it can get to maintain stacks of computations or logic in mind!
this sw eng. in the video, I don't know. It's my job, I met a lot of us in 20 years and you cannot safely rate us until you check the way we work. There are some of us that are monsters who write unintelligible software that works until it doesn't and at that point there's no way to fix it. So just being intelligent it is not enough. Also I wonder what kind of developer she is, the one sipping herbal tea in front of a mac or the one running around in factories integrating alien things to make them work against odds and humans.
As a retired software developer I cannot disagree with you.
🙂
I love telling people about my husband dropping out of high school in Australia and moving to the US and starting a 6-figure carpentry business in less than two years. It’s way more impressive than some degree. The work ethic and drive is unbeatable
agree completely. i was stupid and took time getting a psychology degree whilst my wife finished high school and has opened a fashion store and she makes wayy more then me. we also both got our IQ tested last year and hers was actually higher than mine. so strange how the world convinces you to spend years getting a degree you’ll never pay off when simply started your own buisness will get you way more money. congrats on your husband i wish i made smart decisons like him 😂
Which is why he's your top percentile man. 💪✌️
You can't teach drive and work ethic. That's separate from education. Even in tech, sometimes there are people that are innately talented. John Carmack and John Romero (iD Software), Steve Wozinak and Steve Jobs, Linus Torvalds (I don't believe any of them have a degree).
As a fellow Marine... Well done Devil Dog
Thank you for your service brother 🙏
Right, I was a winger because I did well on the ASVAB and had a 100% choice in MOS. I chose aviation because fighter jets are cool af. The idea that marines are inherently retarded is so dumb. I was also in boot with a dude who scored a 99 or 100(I can't recall which one was this guy, but both in my boot platoon), anyway, he also had a complete choice and went 03 just like his two brothers. Dude was very intelligent. Just wanted to be a grunt like his grandad, dad, and brothers. Civilian disgust and disdain for th armed forced never ceases to amaze me. Specially morons like the PhD girl. Or scumbags I went to school with. Also I'm now an engineer...which is more than I can say for those who looked upon me active duty so poshly.
yut
errah
thank for your service my man 💪
19:26 that guy is definitely colouring the picture with the rainbow
As someone who spends a lot of time around Marines, former active duty and enlisted, you'd be surprised by how intelligent they are at many things. Sure math isn't always their stronghold, but whenever it comes to real life situations and problem solving skills, they're some of the best there is.
Get yourself a Marine friend. They handle stuff.
I still have a friend from high school who has been a Marine for over 20 years now and he loves it.
Many people think that military just using more phisyical and less brain. But they wrong.
They sure know how to pick the best-tasting crayons.
From my experience, people incredibly privy in academics, tend to be the dumbest people out there when it comes to experience and common sense. I’ve met so many people who excel in things such as math, physics, you name it, but have not one clue when it comes to street smarts or how to tackle life problems.
They purposely stress train us to make sure we can maintain a certain level of readiness during extreme stress. That alone goes a long way in life. But as we all know it can take a toll mentally which is why the military has the highest suicide rate of any profession.
Dude is a CBRN specialist. He's the guy the Marines call for help when they find a nuke or bioweapon in a battlefield and expect it to be taken care of while being shot at. I'd say those guys should be required to have a level of book smarts, emotional intelligence, and common sense that exceeds someone who's primary qualification is also the driving factor in their debt/credit score...
It's actually extremely impressive and a really important job as far as jobs go all around the WORLD.
@@veronicab15the basically knuckleheads you call when your average grunt doesn't know jackshit about that odd looking container strapped with other weird stuff that looks harmful. Honestly without those guys. Many would be going home in slowly agonizing deaths since you didn't notice you contracted chemical toxins and other harmful substances
Also in the military classes that civs would take 3month to complete are done in 1 week.
The issue is the others don’t know what his job is or involves.
@@markwierzbicki5307 aside from CBRN. Intelligence unit also takes a ton of mental fortitude to be part in since if we're taking about cramming tonnes of data and digesting it down to key parts useful. You need smart jarheads for that since their the brains that gives feedback for command
I love that the individuals who won't "judge" Sean because of his dress and demeanor immediately negatively judge the marine. (Oh, and they did immediately judge Sean - just positively.)
Exactly!!
Rationalizing their own biases
If anyone ever tells me that they don’t judge someone I immediately don’t trust them. Judging someone is basically your opinion of someone. Sorry for typos, I’m drunk right now.
MBAs are smarter than Marines.
No the fact that they said they didn’t want to judge negatively means that their first impression of Sean was instantly negative. But they had to force themselves to change it.
Tyler was the only one who, in true marine fashion was like “fuck it, I’ll say what everyone is thinking”
Everything you say/ mention, is exactly what I have been ranting about for as long as I know. Why pay to complete my PsyD/MD when you come out and can't even make it back; yet, still have years more of licensure etc. smh
As a homeschool graduate and an uber driver who drove a LOT of military around, I am so glad for the turnout of this show and am not surprised by the outcome.
Those people seem to forget that the biggest tech firms were made by college dropouts. I would rather have Tyler in that position then any of those other people because very few people are capable to do what he does
"homeschool graduate" lol, tough exams for that one bud?
@@KerfaI Many states do have exit exams for homeschoolers. I considered homeschooling one of my children, due to his chronic illness, missing a lot of traditional school, and him being on the spectrum and was a square peg trying to fit in the "round hole" of public school. When he was 16, we got permission for him to take the GED, just as a baseline to determine what he was lacking. He took the test, scored off the charts and got accepted to a state university at 16. I worked in the admissions office of a university graduate school. I looked up from my desk to see two young men about 13 years old. I thought they were lost. They were there to register for classes. One was 12, his brother was 13. They were PHD candidates in our Biomedical Engineering program. They had been homeschooled their entire lives. Their 16 year old sister was also at our university. She was a 3rd year medical student. Also homeschooled.
I feel bad for your children@@maryrichardson1318
They gave EQ as much credit as IQ, which makes Maria's intelligence even worse according to "herself!" Overall Tyler seems like the strongest of them. If I had an organization that needed this group of people as a team, I would make Tyler the boss in a heart beat!
I’d make Tyler and the Asian guy co captains .
If we notice he is even the only one who does manspreading... He is naturally the Alpha in the group, no doubt...
@@anonymousbrowsing2909Asian guy has the IQ, but not the grit. Those women would walk all over him. He'd be perfect for assistant/advisor.
EQ is delusional woowoo nonsense. IQ is the measure of your ability to process new information. That already includes emotional information. Don't be out here pretending astrology is real.
The crazy thing is,the Marine dudes EQ is probably MILES higher than the rest of them, because EQ is all about self control, self regulation, the ability to use your emotions positively and recognize them in others. Which has literally been drilled into him through discipline and training. They keep talking about EQ like it would discount him, but if they added in their EQ scores, dude probably rockets to the top
Check "The Five Laws of Human Stupidity" by Carlo Maria Cipolla.
I don't believe in EQ. Your description is very spot on, but it simply describes maturity and social awareness. Whilst EQ and IQ have challenges in quantifying them, EQ feels so much more abstract and made up for the sake of those ones in the lower spectrum of IQ. I'm not a smart tool, perhaps I could be missing something in all this.
@@mgasukihanwa841 yes, precisely. Instead of accepting that not everyone has a high IQ, but a society has a place for them anyway and they're a valuable human being, we invent new terms to make people feel better. IQ to measure intelligence is flimsy but the best we got, EQ is academically still in research and there is no consensus if it even exists. There is plenty of people with average IQ who accomplished great things, remember yall, it's what you do in life that defines who you are, not what you were born with.
@@Nina-hz9vv thanks for your insight.
Ooooh! Homeschooled. THAT'S why you are so smart, clear, concise, fully understand what's going on in your videos reacting to how others act, have great commentary - Now it all makes sense. I kept wondering how someone so young was able to nail it in every one of your videos.