 Let's check it out. Nice, nice, nice. Hi, everyone. This is Chichou. Welcome to my channel. And welcome to another live stream. Today, today. What is today? Today is February 21st, 2022, 2021, 2022. Pretty cool numbers. Lots of twos. Tomorrow we're going to get a two, two, two, and two, two, two, two. Maybe we should have done the math tutoring session tomorrow. So today is Monday morning, 10 a.m. And we're doing our drop in math tutoring session. Number 79 plus. And as you can tell, we've done a few of these just basically here making myself available for a couple hours. As often as possible, the plan was to make myself available a couple hours every week or at least twice a month. But I just got inundated with students. And for certain maneuvers that our family had to make, I increased my load for students. So that's sort of interfered with our live streams. But I'll try to arrange it so we're back to at least twice a month for these tutoring sessions. And while we wait for notifications to go out, I'm going to do my little intro that I do for these videos, these live streams that are going to be loaded on our other video sharing platforms. And for those of you who want to know what this is about, I am on Patreon, Patreon.com forward slash Chicho Saturn X2 Saturn. Hello, hello. Hope you're doing well. Welcome to our live streams. And gang, if you want to know what this work is about, I am on Patreon, Patreon.com forward slash Chicho C-H-Y-C-H-O. If you want to follow the work, you can follow the work there. I don't put anything behind paywall. Everything is great of commons. Share and share alike. And this is the core essence of what we are doing, which is mathematics. And almost everything that we do is layered on mathematics, and we will connect up everything at some point in the future. And some of the stuff we have already connected up into the realm of mathematics, looked at it from the lens of the language of mathematics, which gives us a huge insight into any particular system, right? And for those of you that are supporting this work on Patreon, gang, I hope you like what you are seeing and what you are supporting, because it is in large part because of your support that we're able to do what it is that we are doing. X2 Saturn. I have terrible math. In fact, when I was in college, I failed basic algebra the first time around, but you make it so interesting to listen to. Awesome Saturn. And the blame of you not doing well in math does not, for the most part, is not on you. It's on the system, because basic algebra is intuitive. It makes sense for us, right? The system, our centralized indoctrination centers make it confusing. And as far as I'm concerned, that is by design. They don't want people to know mathematics, general society, the masses to be literate in the language of mathematics, because if everybody was literate in the language of mathematics, then centralized power would not control their lives, right? And we've talked a lot about this, but I'm glad you're enjoying the content. Larick Bark, how are you doing? Hey, buddy, morning. Chicho and everyone. Indeed, good morning, everyone. And gang, we are live streaming on twitch.tv.com. If you want to participate in these live streams, hello, crafter. How are you doing? And hello, Void, how's life? Check it in, check it in. I hope you guys are doing well. And if you want to participate in these live streams in the chat, twitch is where you want to be at. And for those of you out there, God, how are you doing? For those of you who are here on these live streams and participate in these discussions, gang, thank you very much for being here and for the support and mods, as always. Hello, God, you are in the house always. Brother, thank you for being here. Thank you for the support. Thank you for taking care of business. Crafter, I stopped studying medicine back to engineering math. Oh, really? Yeah, I'd question the medical. I think math and engineering are a little bit better. Nicholas, how are you doing, brother? Hope life is treating you well. What's up? Math is up. Math is up. Lark Park. What up, mate? Lark Park to Elder God. Crafter, absolutely disliked the semester medicine I studied. Yeah, looking at how the world's progressing looks like a lot of what's going on in the healthcare industry is more about rhetoric than following the wrong principles, but wouldn't leave that for discussion on current events, right? Milci, how are you doing? Hey, brother in chat, could do with some math reminders. Awesome, awesome. And if there's anything you guys want to talk about, let us know. There are things I could definitely teach off the cuff, basically all of high school math. And we do announce these live streams 30 minutes before we go live on Mines, VK, you have Parler, Getter and BitCloud. You can follow the work there and we do have a Discord page that you're definitely welcome to join. You can come to our Twitch channel anytime you want and in the chat type in exclamation mark, Discord and the link to the server will pop up there as your invite. You can join and the links will be in the description of this video as well. On charted days, hello, hello, hey, Chico, hope you and Chad are having a great day indeed. It's a nice day. Today is a holiday in, I don't know if it's all of Canada or not, but it's BC and the United States is a holiday. So it's nice and chill. I think it's family day in BC or something. So why not? Let's do a little mathematics. Where were you during my math years in college? It depends when you studied math. The odds are if you were in college in the last 20 years, I was teaching mathematics. I was teaching mathematics. And if you were in college in the late 2000s, 2007, 2008, 2009, thank you very much HIV positive. Oh no, you must have participated in the greatest sigh up in human history. But if you were studying math in college in the late 2000s, I was uploading videos on sensor to teaching mathematics. Right. Now they got a regular boring Monday here in the UK. Boring is okay. I think boring is okay. Boring is not bad. For live streams, when we don't have any visuals, we do upload the audio to soundcloud.com forward slash chico CHYCHO is a podcast and those podcasts are available and should be available in your favorite podcasting platform, including Spotify, iTunes and Google Play. Lark Bark. I was attending college 10 years ago at Devry University. Dev, Devry University. Where's Devry University? Lark Bark. I don't know that one. And 10 years ago, yep, I was making math videos. A lot of a lot of Joe. Very windy. Third storm here in a week. Really here. We had snow this morning. We had snow this morning, but it's nice and sunny now. So it's really nice. Definitely going to be going for a walk after, after this live stream. Walks are back, baby. Walks are back. Saturn. Thank you very much for the tier once. I appreciate the support. I appreciate the support. And we got to, we got to fix up that zombie emote. We got to, I got to figure out an emote to put in there. Maybe a truck going honk honk. Lark Bark. Oh, so making found math, math bonus brilliant. Indeed. And it's good exercise. It's good exercise. I detest our centralized indoctrination centers. First and foremost, because they made people dislike math. They, they shat on math. And for that, they cannot forgive them. Right? Roy Hook. Fifth day of snow storms on Quebec. Love the great white north. Love the great white north indeed. And gang. Oh, let's check out. Devry University is a private for-profit university with its headquarters and NAPI, Napierville, Illinois, Illinois. Really. Campuses throughout the United States founded in 1931 by Herman A. Devry. Devry. The school is regionally accredited by the Higher Learning Commission. Cool, cool, cool. I don't, you know, the name, the way you spelt it. I've seen it before, but it didn't ring a bell. Elegant 32 years since I was in education. I didn't have the G. Joe's assistance. Either than I, I wish I did. And gang, we will be uploading this live stream to SensorTube to pitch you to rumble and to Odyssey. This is mathematics. Then mathematics goes everywhere. Right? So we're going to upload this to SensorTube as well. But if you are watching this on SensorTube, if you want to get all of our content, you want to be on Bitshoot, rumble on Odyssey or Odyssey, one of those three, because that's where we upload everything. Not on SensorTube. SensorTube is not a platform anymore for independent creators. It's a platform for technocrats and those pushing the corporate agenda. And we are anything but corporate. Right? First time chat. C. Al Stelter. 23-23. You're really, really, I don't know what the elder god killed it. Boo. First time chat within 10 seconds. Done. Oh my god, look at this dude. Hilarious, hilarious. The last thing was, don't delete me and the elder god came in. Boo. Dead. I'm nervous. Right. Every university has been through some hot water over the years through losses. Oh, is that what it is? That's maybe where I've seen it. The logo popping up. Or the name popping up. Let me take these guys down. Choo-choo. And choo. Void. I am 27 and always treated teachers as my enemy. And a few years after high school came to so many realizations. Boy, was I wrong? Yeah. There are some teachers that behave as your enemy, but many teachers try their best, right? But it's the system that it's, it's just ties their hands behind their back, right? Many of them. It's, we need decentralization. And one of the main things that we need is decentralization of education. 100%. X2 Saturn, laugh out loud. What a way to make us interest. Entrance and an exit. This is, this is like judo, right? Or jujitsu, right? You use their momentum and throw them away. They come in. You do this and you go, just grab them and just push them out slowly. And they go flying. It's martial arts. Larry Bark is a great job, Elder God. Indeed. Ronnie, teachers don't get paid enough, at least in America. No, they don't. They don't get paid enough. In Scandinavian countries, they get paid as much as doctors for what I understand, which is they need to be paid more, right? And there needs to be some kind of a decentralization of education and everything has really destroyed the fabric of our societies. And we need to work towards decentralizing things. Right? Ronnie, I'm studying right now and taking a small break. Awesome. Awesome. Studying is an amazing space to be. Really. Like, just imagine that your only job in life is to learn. Man, that's pretty sweet. That's pretty sweet. Right? Elder God too, Alark Bark. Math is troll heavy usually. Yeah. It has been sometimes, right? And I think that's because the trolls, some of those trolls have gone through a centralized indoctrination centers and they think math is their enemy, right? They're too stupid to realize if they studied math, it would improve their troll ability, right? It would make them power them up. Huge. They want these weak trolls that you can throw around like a rag doll, right? Weak trolls are the worst thing, right? Weak trolls, weak trolls are the sewers of the internet, right? They're what they're what real, real trolls and real hackers and people who know what the internet is about. They do their those people's BM, right? It's funny. It cracks me up. The internet gang. I've been on online since the late 1980s. So I've seen the progression of the internet, right? And it's incredible. It's brilliant. And man, I can honestly tell you the information available online, if you know how to get it and educate yourself, is amazing. But unfortunately, there's a lot of people that like the sound of their own ignorance. So they tend to try to destroy or what's the best way of saying it? They don't understand what it means to be alive, to have fun, to learn, to have the human experience, right? They don't get it. So if they don't get it, they assume that no one must get it, right? They're what we would call useful idiots of the centralized state, right? Larkvark, there's some good teachers and bad teachers, but the education system is behind the outcome indeed. Elder God has an itchy trigger finger. Respect. He's got a really sharp trigger finger. Really? When Elder God takes someone out, they deserve to be taken out. 99.9%. Unfortunately, you know, there's 1% less than 1% collateral damage, as you would say. And it is what it is, right? It is what it is. Boost gumps. Thank you very much for the Twitch Prime sub. Appreciate the support. Appreciate the support. Yes, learning is never-ending. Learning is never-ending. Never be content boys and girls, Ronnie says. Indeed. Larkvark. Yeah, I've noticed that two out of all streams math, not even the political streams carried that much trolls. Yeah, to a certain degree, political streams, we haven't had very many trolls, which is good. I mean, what are they going to troll in the discussion? I don't know, weird. Ronnie, I think people that fear math just feel overwhelmed because they appear to be never-ending concepts but really math is simple and everything just builds off of some simple axiom. Yeah, indeed, Ronnie. And one of the things you've noticed that centralized power does, right? Centralized power, centralized capitalist power are those who want to manipulate control humanity, right? Have figured out that humanity, we have a tendency to fear what we do not understand, right? And to be violent against that thing, whatever it might be. A lot of people who've gone through our centralized indoctrination centers, they've been indoctrinated program to fear mathematics, right? So one thing they do when they fear mathematics is they lash out like little children, right? Now, for them to be able to evolve into full-grown thinking human beings, they have to let go of that fear. They have to let go of that indoctrination. They have to break their chains that centralized power has put on them, right? And that's one of the reasons we're here and one of the reasons we create the content that we do, right? To get rid of that stigma of fear in mathematics. Once you understand what math is, which is the language we have developed to try to understand the world, like really the language we have developed to try to understand the world and interact with it as best as we can for the time that we are here. Man, why in the world would you not take the time to learn that, to acquire that tool? That's the most ultimate power-up in any game that you would play, right? And life is your game, right? Saturn. Had some great teachers in school that saved my life. I got kicked out of my house my last year in high school. Oh, no, and I had a teacher that would bring me food every day. Oh, nice teacher, man. And I lived with one of my football coaches for a few months until I was back on my feet. Oh, wow, man. Good on you, Saturn. Good on you for seeing it through, man. And fantastic that you had the support there to help you out. That's really good, man. It's unfortunate you have to go through that. But Nietzsche, right? What doesn't kill you makes you stronger. Ronnie, damn. You had great mentors around you. Yeah, Saturn, indeed. And gang, don't forget. Free Assange, Free Assange, Free Assange. Julian Assange's publisher and journalist that has been crucified for trying to bring transparency and accountability of capitalist power to humanity. For more information, see wikileast.org, defend.wikileast.org, or Julian Assange and Wikileast playlist on censor two. Oh, God, the liberal troll is the worst kind of human being. Funny, funny. Saturn, for sure. I would probably be homeless if it wasn't for them. Wow. Wow, Saturn. Man, that is what amazing teachers are all about, right? Their support system. That's fantastic, man. You're a lucky Saturn. The education system in America is broken. Lark Bark says that the education system in America is broken. Same with Canada. It's been gutted. It's annihilated. Canadian education system is you can just flush it down the toilet. It's done, right? Yokey is 62. First time chat. Hello, hello. How are you doing? And welcome to our live stream. Welcome to our live stream. Yeah, math is definitely universal. Microtourist, how are you doing? Hey, gang, what tool are you talking about? What tool, what tool? Mathematics, the language of mathematics being the ultimate tool that you can acquire to help you navigate this life and help you to become the best you can be, or what you want to be. It doesn't even have to be the best you can be. It's what you want to be, how you want to interact with this life, right? That's what it is. Just notice the shaving head is yes, baby. Yes, baby. I took it down yesterday. I let it grow. Once it goes beyond a certain level, I got to trim it off. I like the slick feel. Aerodynamic. Aerodynamic. Love it. Matty G, how are you doing? Free McAfee. McAfee didn't kill himself, right? Neither did the other guy, and neither did the newest guy, and neither will Maxwell. Crazyness, crazyness. Oh, let me show you my snacks, gang. A Persian store has these things. These are ginger, caramelized, not caramelized, but what do you call it? With sugar on them? It's like ginger, and it's spicy. It's probably not the healthiest thing for you, but the ginger part is. The ginger part is really good, and ginger is amazing for the tongue. Sugar coated ginger, sugar coated ginger. Amazing with tea. Haha, never had raw ginger, only ginger ale. There's a reason why ginger ale, if you feel sick and you've got, you know, tummy issues and whatnot with the flu. Ginger ale is like, ah, when you drink it, it's just like, just a relief. The carbonation and the ginger, I don't know if it's got real ginger or not, but ginger is amazing for the tummy. Saturn can't wait for Maxwell's cell guards to fall asleep and for the cameras to stop working. I'm already ready for it. Incredible, eh? Incredible. Incredible. Allergod, I eat ginger raw. Great for you. Yeah, I do as well every now and then. Just pop a ginger. It's like really spicy, but in a good way. And definitely ginger tea. Ginger tea is super good. Matty G. Yep, it's my, to go to stomach ache. Yeah, yeah. Ginger has got to be, for your medicine cabinet, it's not a medicine cabinet. Food is your first medicine, by the way, should be your first medicine. Preventative medicine, you want to call it, or preventative food, right? But ginger should be something that you should always have in your home. Ginger and mint. Ginger, mint and turmeric. What else? Salt and a whole bunch of other herbs, right? But ginger, mint, turmeric are two things that should be staple in your kitchen. And should be something that you use on a regular basis. Mint is amazing for the tummy. Ginger is, mint is just amazing, period. Amazing flavor as well. Same with ginger, and ginger is good for the tummy. And Turmeric is an anti-inflammatory. Turmeric, I put in a lot of my foods that I cook, and it's fantastic. Allergod, we could math out probability of Maxwell slipping on a wet floor, or somehow, somehow finding rope and a chair and something. Who knows? And is it really her? Who knows? But we could talk about that during our current West Livestream. For mathematics, I'm not sure, I'm not sure. The math, people have enlarged part in my part of the world. The ones, they really, I feel, I feel seriously bad for kids who are taking math in school right now in Canada, because they're behind, they're never catch up. So there's at least two year period where at least two years worth of engineers, scientists, mathematicians, physicists, geophysicists, engineers, whatever you want to, whatever economists, statisticians, medicine, there's a minimum two year period in Canada right now, where 90% of the people that would have gone into those fields will not be going to those fields. And this is extending, right? Now we're going into the three year period and stuff. So there's going to be a serious backlash, repercussions to what's happened with these lockdowns with our education system, because we're going to have serious gap need for certain amount of people to be in certain fields that require mathematics, right? Or higher degree. Estag. That's Russian, I'm assuming. I think it's Russian, I'm pretty sure it's Russian. Salutations. Welcome to our live stream. And mathematics in Russia, powerful, powerful. Russia is probably producing the most powerful mathematicians in the world and has been doing so for a number of decades. Nothing touches Russian mathematicians, really. The mathematics ability in Russia is through the roof. What we learn here, what we do here, what Canadians do in high school math, Russians do in elementary school math, right? And Kazooie, Kazee, 24. Welcome to our live stream. Russia and Iran has the best engineers in the world. Yeah, Iran too. Iran, 40 years ago, they were teaching calculus in grade eight. 40 years ago in Canada, you couldn't find a high school that taught you calculus. I know this because our family came from Iran 40 years ago. The mathematics I learned halfway through grade five in Iran 40 years ago, took me all the way to grade 10 in Canada 40 years ago. When I got to grade 10, we had just started in Canada. When I got to grade 10, we had just started doing what I was doing halfway through grade five in Iran. Crazy, crazy. Joe, have you heard of Zeno's paradox? Yeah, that rings the bell, but I can't remember what the paradox is. Joe, I can't remember what the paradox is. Maddie G, I work at a university. They pay for two free classes per semester. I want to learn coding, but calculus is required, and I'm terrible at math. You have to challenge, you have to challenge yourself, you have to challenge yourself. And Maddie G, look, I had a problem with calculus when I first took it at university. Okay, I failed it the first time I took it because I assumed I could just coast through it. I didn't coast through it. I thought I could cram for it. So like the night before the final the next morning, I went to university and grabbed, cracked open the book and tried to learn the whole semester in overnight. And that's what I used to do. I used to, I like doing hardcore overnight sessions. Man, that's an amazing space to be in as a student. When you sit there all night, pull all nighters learning something, like you just immerse yourself in that topic. I don't know if you guys have done it. If you've gone to university, most likely you have done it. I thrived on that. I thrived on it. It is brilliant. But I couldn't do it for calculus. And I retook it again when I transferred universities. And again, I didn't really fully understand it. One of the reasons I had pretty crappy profs, but I read the book and all of a sudden it just clicked for me. And once you understand calculus, it's the introduction of time into mathematics, introduction of the rate of change into mathematics. So what it is is just basically, and that's the key to understanding calculus, understand what it is, not how to do calculus, but why you're doing it and what it is. So calculus is basically looking at functions not in a static form, not a static moment, but looking at functions and how they change and trying to understand the rate of change of that function, of that system, doing the calculus, looking into the future and extrapolating data from the past. That's the first step in calculus. And once you grasp that, then you go into it with the right perspective, I think. That's what made it click for me. Okay, microtourists. Russia and Iran. Thanks, Matigee. I love math as a kid. What somewhere lost my way growing up. Now that I love learning again, I'm intrigued. Also, Matigee. And by the way, what you're saying is one of the things that I have to deal with with my students every year. I have parents that come to me when I start working with them. They might be new students or they might be students that I've worked with before and a parent just drops this information. They go, I don't understand it. My kid used to love math and then they started going to school and then they hated math. I'm like, well, that's by design. The system, the centralization indoctrination centers are doing that by design. So one of my jobs as an educator, someone who teaches mathematics is to put the love back into mathematics. And I put out a video on this. One of the first videos I put out, I think it was a second series I put out, Love and Hate. It's an important video. Let me find it for you guys again because I think it's just trying to show why this is. Let's see if this pops it up. There it is. It's on SensorTube. It should be on Odyssey as well, but I'll link up the SensorTube link, right? And there's a full beer that I put this out in. When did I put this out? Jeez, what is the date on this? 2010? It doesn't even have the date for some reason. Weird. SensorTube is wack, all right? This is the video I put out regarding mathematics and love and hate and basically, you know, what one of my first jobs is. And some, and I went hard on that video that I put out, right? You know, I've done it in ASMR format too, chill. Depending on the perspective, I just wanted to get a point across and that one just pounded. And that's from the How to Study series. Saturn, I do the same thing. I always cram. It's the best way for the info to be fresh in my mind. Yeah, but it does put it into short-term memory. That's the problem with cramming, right? So cramming is okay thing to do, because some courses you're taking because it's just a prerequisite. You need to take it, right? It's mandatory to take it. And if you're not interested in that field, you can just cram, put it in short-term memory, vomit it out during a test, and then let it go. Some of the other stuff, you need to have an extended period of time looking at it for it to go into long-term memory, right? Dice power. My buddy doesn't work like that. If I didn't get something done or learn by midnight, it was my body. It wasn't getting done. Yeah, dice power. I know people like that too. They're like, no, if it's not in, it's too late. I'm like, dude, just put it in. No, no, it's not going to work. Come on, look at this. No, don't show it to me. I don't want to know. Funny. And that's the key, right? We're all different. That's the beauty of human beings. That's the beauty of life. We're all different. If we're all the same, we would have already gone extinct, right? That's why humanity should not participate in a single experiment, all of humanity. Because if that experiment doesn't work out the way that some people thought, that's an extinction event. Right? I can't, thanks for your time, buddy. Especially if you're a Joe, Joe Bean Bailey. Hello, Chicho. Hope you are well, brother. You are familiar with augmented matrices. Augmented matrices. Oh, God, matrices. Determinants and matrices. I can't remember what augmented matrices are. Joseph. Okay. Determinants and matrices, I study at university, I actually taught myself. I taught myself, it was a prerequisite for an applied mathematics multi integral thing. I took crazy course. So I taught determinants and matrices myself. And then later on, after I taught it myself, took that crazy course. I took determinants and matrices and man, it was the easiest thing I've ever done in my life. I wouldn't know how to do it right now, to be honest, because I haven't done it for a couple of decades, more than that, three decades, right? But they're fun to do. They're fun to do. Thank you. It's very nice to listen to you. Awesome. Thank you for popping in, right? I'm trying to, I love pulling all night, nighters at uni, but it was always a good idea the night before exams. Yeah. Yeah, always a good idea the night before exams, right? And all nighters, I do miss the student life really. That is one thing that is absolutely brilliant, where you're just focused on one thing. First time chat. Hello, how are you? I'm doing good. Thank you very much. See seven kujos. Welcome to our live stream, Joe Chicho. They are a set of paradoxes. So this is a, what was the paradox called? Xenos paradox, I believe. Xenos paradox. They are a set of paradoxes centered around how the concept of infinity doesn't work in the real world. The first paradox can be imagined as holding your hands apart and then moving one hand towards the other until they clap. From a mathematical point of view, we can imagine this as having the distance between our hands then have it again and again and again. If we divide a number by two, it goes on to for infinity. Yeah. Yeah. So Xenos paradox. I actually put out a video on this. What did I call it? Here, let me see if I can find it. I might as well share this as well. What did I call it? I called it infinity. Let's see. I put out some stuff on infinity. I like the concept of infinity. Cutting a line. What did I call it? Cutting a line into breaking a line. Apologies if I'm not reading the chat right now. Oh, here it is. No, that's not it. Oh, come on. Hold on. Xichuo infinity. It's part of the infinity series I put out, like almost not popping up. Oh, now I spent this much time on it. I gotta find it. Xichuo infinity. Dwing, dwing. Sorry, gang, but since I started this, I need to track this baby down. It's on sensor tube. Oh, it's part of this series. Okay. I should be able to find it from this one. Oh, did I even link it up? I didn't link it up. Silly Xichuo. Silly Xichuo goes on forever until the end of time. My two infinities. Oh, I would be in this. Wow, this is the longest I've looked at the chat for a while. Come on. Do I have it here? Do I have it here? Master of the tree. Oh, dude. That's unfortunate. Sensor tube searching is crazy. Math. Nope. Nope. Nope. Nope. Nope. Halfway. It must be halfway. Infinity halfway. Let's see. Halfway. Oh, there it is. Okay, check this out. So this is what you're talking about. That was hard to find. That was hard to find. I'm going to go back to the chat game. Eccles in the tortoise. So when you clap your hands, we're completing infinite process in a finite amount of time. But the last moment is not going halfway. So it can't be. So if we go halfway, if we just bring this one halfway, we go halfway, halfway, halfway, we're never actually going to reach the point, right? It reaches a point where you have to break an atom to go the other half distance, right? But this is, I think to me, this is when they finally clap, right? This is the, this is the sort of a same type of ending. Or you can think about as beginning is a big bang. We don't know what happens in the last moment. How to study a good series. Joe Chicho. Eccles in the tortoise is another one of the paradoxes. It's state that Eccles shouldn't be able to overtake the tortoise in a race, because as he gets closer, he is continually halving the distance. So he should never cash the tortoise. But of course, in the real world, he would. He completes an infinite number of steps in an infinite amount of time and a finite amount of time. Yeah. So it's the same concept. I didn't realize it was called Zeno's paradox. Ronnie agreed. I think people should become more comfortable living with different people around us. I think people just get caught up with wanting to be accepted, that they have different, accepting different opinions and views on tortoise. As you can tell by my last message, I have just pulled an all nighter to choose on tortoise. Nice. Joseph, brother, I don't know if you tried this. Whiskey is called Esso Banana Whiskey. It's very sweet and I recommend it. Okay. Don't explore us. How are you doing? Mathematical greetings. Mathematical greetings to you as well. Ronnie. Well, it's because there's an infinite infinity between two integers or even real numbers. Yeah. Within zero and one, there's an infinite number of real numbers. Yeah. So for example, what Ronnie is talking about, if we take the number here, here's a number line, right? Let's just go like this. Here's zero, here's one, here's two, right? Oops, two. How many numbers, and there's different categories of numbers here. Let's do it better. Let's do, let's talk about the real number set, right? We want to talk about the real number set here. Zero, one, two, three, and negative one, negative two, negative three, right? And we've talked about this real number set. It's one of the first videos, it's literally video number three out of hundreds of videos I put out in mathematics. It's the first video, one of the first lessons I put out for mathematics back in 2007 when I started creating math videos, right? So it's crucial. This is a foundation of, as far as I'm concerned, when we were trying to learn math, high school math anyway, the beginning of mathematics, is you have to understand what the real number set is, number set, right? And it's basically human evolution, right? It's the real number set, the history of mathematics, or the way the rules of mathematics have developed, right, is basically human evolution, a history of human evolution, right? So the first type of numbers that us human beings really began to grasp were integers, or not integers, sorry, natural numbers, counting numbers, one, two, three, four, five. And we call these natural numbers, right? Natural numbers, and they're one, two, three, so on and so forth, right? And then some dude in India defined the number zero, and it was a huge leap in human evolution. It was like the discovery of fire, right? And apologies if I'm not reading the chat, but it was like the discovery of fire for mathematics. He defined the number zero, and we started looking at how zero works in mathematics, right? It has a major problem where we can't divide by zero, the universe explodes, but it has a major power, because if we set it equal to zero, set an equation equal to zero, we can factor equations, have things multiplied to get to give you zero, that means we can split them up into equaling zero, so we can solve for equations that way, so made solving for equations way, way easier, right? And because of that, we called it a new category, subset, or a superset, right? And we called the whole number set because it includes natural numbers, but as well as zero, right? Human evolution, we learned something new. And then later on, I forget who came up or where they defined integers, right? We started working with integers, which is basically positive and negative whole numbers, right? Negative two, negative one, zero, one, two, dot, dot, dot. And again, this was a leap in evolution, right? This is like discovering the wheel, right? When people say, what are some of the greatest discoveries, innovations in human history? You know, people go, oh, the computer, sure, the computer was, they go, this, this, but people don't realize that two of the major discoveries in human evolution that gave birth to our present civilization or humanity really was fire and the wheel, right? Those are two of the greatest discoveries in human history, okay, or prehistory, right? So integers are positive and negative whole numbers. And again, these had benefits and problems, right? The problem was you couldn't, at the time, you couldn't take the even root of a negative number and they call those imaginary numbers. Hundreds of years later, they find out, wow, we should call them complex numbers because the mathematics revealed something about the world to us that we didn't know existed and we didn't understand at the time, we called it imaginary because we thought it was a byproduct of mathematics, the algebra, and then later on, hundreds of years later, you find out, oh my God, this is in life. This is something that exists in the world. We just didn't know how to interact with it, right? And that is happening right now at the moment, right? In mathematics, right now, there are people working on things and mathematics is revealing something to us and the mathematicians, scientists, they don't know what that is, right? What is this thing that's being revealed to us? Is this part of life? And from history, yeah, we know it's part of life. It exists. We just don't know how to read it, interact with it, but the mathematics is revealing it to us, right? That's what integers did, okay? And then above this, you have what's called rational numbers, right? Rational numbers. And usually, you define this with Q in my part of world, right? And rational numbers are any numbers that you can write as fractions of integers, right? So the definition of this is fractions of integers, fractions of integers, integers, okay? They usually define, tell people in my part of the world, county, United States, that these are numbers that either end or repeat. And I hate that definition. The reason I don't like that definition, because it's not the definition. That's what these numbers are. But the definition should be numbers that you can write as fractions of integers. That allows students to get a better grasp of fractions, right? Not just decimals, right? So once you can manage fractions, you basically rule your own world, right? You power it up, right? And with mathematics, for everything you do, you can undo. With mathematics, for things that are, operations that are, there are operations that negate that operation, right? And in this case, if we have a set of numbers that are defined as numbers that you can write as fractions of integers, well, guess what? There are a set of numbers that you cannot write as fractions of integers, right? And these are called irrational numbers. Irrational numbers. And these are, it's defined as Q with a line up top. In mathematics, you put a line on top of a letter, usually means not that, right? So if Q means rational, this means not rational, right? And these are numbers that you cannot, cannot define, not define, not cannot write as fraction of integers, right? Right, as fraction of integers. Pi is one, square root of two is another, square root of any prime number. Prime numbers rules this, right? But for what Joe was saying, right? Zeno's paradox. There's an infinite number of numbers between zero and one, right? But let's look at this from the base up. Go through it from human evolution, right? If I was to ask the question, how many natural numbers are there between negative three and three, right? So how many, how many natural numbers between, between, between, oh my god, I'm just going to go like this. Natural numbers between, between negative three to three. Well, the answer is natural numbers are counting numbers, one, two, three. It doesn't include zero or negative numbers, right? Or fractions. So there are actually only one, two, three natural numbers between negative three and three. So the answer to this is three. And then you can ask the same question. How many whole numbers, how many whole numbers, whole numbers are there between negative three and three? Well, whole numbers is a new category that defined the number zero. So zero's included in this. So we've got four whole numbers, right? Four whole numbers between negative three and three. You can continue this, right? How many integers between negative three and three? Well, integers are positive and negative whole numbers. So one, two, three, four, five, six, seven. Seven integers between negative three and three. And then you go on to rational numbers. How many rational numbers are there between negative three and three? How many rational numbers between negative three and three? And the answer to that is infinite, infinite, infinite, right? Why is it infinite? For example, let's say because rational numbers are numbers that you can write as fractions of integers, right? So there's one over two here. Yeah, that's a rational number. Cool. There's one over four here, one over four. And you can continue this just in this zone, right? There's infinite number of rational numbers between any two rational numbers. That is an infinite number of rational numbers. So if we take this area, let's zoom it out, right? Let's say this line here is one over 32, okay? And this line here would be one over 16, right? One sixteenth. Well, there's infinite number of numbers here. Infinite number, infinite number between all these two numbers as an infinite number of numbers, right? So huge leap in human evolution from integers to rational numbers. Computers, maybe? Human technology, right? Comparison, I don't know, right? And then you go into irrational numbers and you go, okay, how many irrational numbers are there between negative three and three? How many irrational, rational numbers between negative three and three? That's also infinite. There's an infinite number of irrational numbers between these things. Why is there infinite number of irrational numbers? Because for every one of these things, if you think about it, there is an extra number that is not part of the rational number set, because it could be the square root of that number, right? So for example, over here, let's say we had one third, right? One over three. Well, that's a rational number that exists there, right? And there's an infinite number between zero and one third. But then there's an additional set of numbers that are not part of the rational numbers, such as one over the square root of three. Now, that's an irrational number because that's the square root of a prime number, right? But you can't put it into the rational category. You have to put an irrational category. Huge leap forward again, right? So it just grows from there, right? Mathematics is based on some of these most simple concepts you will ever encounter in your life. And as you analyze what they tell you, as you start working with them, just like any tool that you learn how to use, right? If you're new to using a hammer, the only thing you're going to do is, at best, put nails in wood, right? And probably bang your thumb a few times. But as you become a carpenter, you use your tool more and more. You start doing a lot more with hammers than just putting nails in the wall, right? And that goes with every tool, including mathematics, okay? Sort of went off on that one. I thought it was worth recapping the base of what math is and where this begins and where it can take us, right? Apologies if I missed the chat. I'm assuming there was some stuff that was popping up that I wasn't catching. Oh, oh, God, you got it. This one. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Was it this one? Yeah, yeah. It was that one. Nice. Thank you. I had it four minutes ago. Wasn't sure. Yeah, yeah. That's the one. Plutonic pulse. There's also a physical theory that things never really meet. Yeah. And it's what do you call it? It goes into the forces, right? The strong, weak nuclear forces and stuff. I like how Chicho does a flash speed moment. Joe, Chicho. So does it mean that we can't think of the universe as being continuous? It can't be split into infinitely small parts. No, I think it can be. I think that's actually the way we should look at it, Joe. So for example, black holes, right? So black holes, people think of black holes as being the largest objects in the universe, right? One of the largest objects in the universe, okay? Or one of the objects that give rise to the biggest objects in the universe, which could be galaxies or clusters of galaxies, I guess that would be it, right? I think clusters of galaxies, super galaxies is one of the largest. But the center of galaxies I believe to be many galaxies is to be large black holes, right? So people tend to think of black holes as being these large things. But I believe, and I looked at this a long time ago, we do get mini black holes, right? So there are mini black holes, and I believe, if I recall correctly, reading this stuff like 15, 20 years ago, some of those mini black holes are you can't distinguish from elementary particles. And some people say some of those mini black holes could be the elementary particles, right? So white holes to a certain degree, okay? So black holes, gotta go back to my memory. There is, I believe, three distinct characteristics, features of black hole that you can categorize black holes in. One of them is the spin, one of them is the charge, and the other one is the spin charge and rotation, you know, spin is the rotation, oscillation, something like that. And those three properties or four properties are identical to the properties of elementary particles. So if you give those properties to someone, you would, that person could, would have to know if you're talking about a black hole elementary particle. This stuff is so damn cool, so, so cool. So it's, it's worth exploring. I haven't explored it for a long time, but it still excites me when I talk about it, right? Or when I think about it. Plutonic Plurus, there's also a number file on it. Infinities, in general, are philosophical and mathematical open ground. Yeah, I like Set Theory and Kantor S-Work. And there's an amazing documentary on infinity, forbidden knowledge or unlawful knowledge or something. It's a, it's a documentary that a mathematician made in honor of three of his heroes that were mathematicians that the thought of infinity destroyed their minds. Two of them went insane and one of them committed suicide. It's an amazing documentary. First encounter. Brilliant video. From Number File. Yeah, Number File does amazing work. Allegot, 24 September of 20, 2007. First math video. I watched it this morning. Awesome, Allegot. Those were fun, man. Wow, crazy times, crazy times. Allegot, Bruce Lee, 1947. Thank you for the follow. Thank you for the follow, Bruce Lee, 1947. Apologies if I'm not catching the follows, gang. When I go off on rants like this, it's very, it throws me off rails if I try to either read the chat and I do sometimes and it does throw me off sometimes or try to catch the names of people following or subbing. So I do appreciate the support, gang. Thank you for that. Plutonic Plurus, is it a fractal pullover, Chico? Is it a fractal pullover? I don't know. I'm not sure what you mean by a pullover. And fractal, what part of it? Joseph. For some reason, Twitch is tagging Plutonic Plurus and Joseph's comments. Plutonic still, but Joseph as well, as a suspicious user or something, but I'm going to read it because I don't trust the Ottoman thing, right? Chico, do you own any old books, for example, from earlier centuries? An old friend of mine used to have a massive collection of literature from the Renaissance period in Italian even. No, no, I don't own any books that are more than 100 years old from the previous century. Well, previous century, I do own a lot of books from the 1990s. That's our previous century, but nothing from the 1800s. Nothing from the 1800s. I wish if I ever generated enough funds, that is one place I would definitely invest money in. Five. Hello, first time chat. C, C, ouch, 71. How can one find, create irrational numbers? Take a root of an even root or any root of a prime number. Any root of a prime number is an irrational number. Okay, mass spin. Okay, there it is. Elegant. Thank you. Mass. That's the one I was missing. Mass spin and electric charge. Right? So you can give those three properties, say this entity weighs and make them small because there could be mini black holes, right? This much, it has this spin and it has this electric charge and the person could not tell you if that was supposed to be an elementary particle or a black hole, right? You would have to define it. Cheryl, how are you doing? Happy Monday. Happy math day. Nice. Happy math Monday. Awesome. Gamer nerd. Hey, just wanted to say sorry for going off on you yesterday. I just was stressed yesterday when I joined. No worries, Gamer nerd. It's all good, brother. And you're allowed to go off. Really? No worries with that. Unless you're spamming or trolling, it's all good, really. And you didn't go off as far as I'm concerned. Maybe I went off. I went hard ass, right? And this was for anyone watching this video that's loaded on SensorTube. Here, if you're watching this video on SensorTube, what Gamer Nerd is talking about is some of the discussion we had on current events that we did yesterday, but that video could not be loaded on SensorTube because SensorTube does not allow such discussions to be taken place. So you can watch that video on Bichu, Rumble, or Odyssey. Okay. Joe. There's a speculative idea called digital physics where we imagine the fundamental basis of the universe as information and the universe is divided into a finite grid. So where we imagine the fundamental basis of the universe as information, which it is, right? And the universe is divided into a finite grid, into a finite grid. So basically called an integers, right? Into a finite, well, integers are infinite. So I guess within a certain limit, within the boundaries of the universe into a finite grid. Okay. This must continue. What's that called speculative idea, Joe? Not a bad Joseph. Some of the mathematical literature from the 14th century is beautiful. The knowledge of math at that time was truly ahead of his time. The ways they used math to construct complex things. Yeah, yeah. I looked at some of that stuff by the way, Joseph. I looked at some of that stuff. Some of it a long time ago. And mathematics used to be, you know, all these symbols of math that we have right now didn't exist centuries ago, right? They used words to prove things and write equations and talk about the universe and solve equations, right? Some of it was crazy, like amazing. Like just imagine, gang, if you had no access to a library of books, right? Because books were very difficult to print. They're very difficult to come by, right? There was a time where people were trying to collect all the books in the world, right? Before the printing press came along, right? And they had to stop. All those collectors had to stop because the printing press was able to mass produce books and a lot of books started coming out and you couldn't collect all the books in the world anymore, right? But you start looking at some of that literature from centuries ago and you realize that just imagine if you didn't have a stereo, you couldn't play music, you had to go listen to music live only, right? You didn't have television, you didn't have electricity, okay? You didn't have the internet, you didn't have movie theater, you didn't have all these distractions in life, right? Or entertainments in life. What would you do, right? To occupy the mind? Well, there were people that really just went ballistic on the sciences and mathematics, right? And they let their imaginations run wild and started doing a lot of math and pulling in different ideas together and came up really laid the foundation of our present civilization. Amazing stuff, amazing stuff. Free speech is essential to T-Shows thinking. Indeed, free speech is it gang, right? Plutonic Plurus, the question of whether the universe space is discrete, finite, or theoretically infinite is interesting. For me, what I find, what I'm curious about is what's beyond the boundaries of the visible universe, right? Or the universe we can interact with, right? If the universe began from a black hole, not a black, well, let's say a white hole, a black hole somewhere else, white hole spewing out, right? From the big bang, right? And it's expanding . What was outside of the space that is being created? What are we creating the space in? Aside from that, the universe inside, I think it is, you can keep on breaking it down to smaller, smaller pieces. But to me, it does have a bound to it. First time shot, laugh out loud, laugh out loud, do dext. This is an unrelated question, but what age could you grow a big beard like this? For me, by my late teens, I could grow a large beard. Not as full as I can now, I was able to grow in the early 20s. So by late teens, early 20s, just my genetics allowed me to do this. I'm grateful for it. Those periods where beard, facial hair was a no-no, people were like, oh, facial hair. I was like, man, you guys don't know where it's at. Joe Chicho. It's known as digital physics. We imagine the universe as a vast digital computation device, or as the output of a deterministic or probabilistic computer program. Cool. This is the thing that people lay the foundation for. We live in a VR, right? In virtual reality? Joe? Plutonic Plurus. I somehow doubt pure information universe or simulation, but I guess there is a physical end in the sizes. Strings are maybe too small already. While there are supposed to be large strings, if we're talking about string theory, string theory is not just about there's little subatomic size strings, even smaller and subatomic size. I believe, if I'm not mistaken, I read Brian Green's Elegant Universe like 20 years ago. But I believe there are larger strings hypothesized, right? If that's what we're talking about. Joseph, you know what man, I believe there's gonna come a day where as a race, we'll have no choice but to go backwards. I'm a young guy, 24, maybe even in my lifetime. Really, go backwards in time. I wouldn't call it devolved, but just go backwards in time. I don't know. I don't know. Because are you connecting up with an expanding universe and then collapsing? And that is a theory that's been around, right? Well, someone, I forget what the iteration is. Someone said that this we're in the 15th iteration of this universe expanding and then collapsing itself and then expanding and collapsing itself. Maybe during the collapse period, we go backwards in time, which would be cool, sort of weird. Ginger, sugar-coated ginger. Padre, padre, padre, how are you doing? Padre says, I think the universe is expanding back into itself. Expanding back into itself. Tortoise, what's it called? Or collapsing into itself. Beer power, beer power. A strong goatee, goatee can make you a god, the other god says, hilarious. Joe Chicho, if the universe is a computer simulation, wouldn't it have to be finite in size? Both in how big it can be and how small. The computer itself, yeah, but the universe it creates, if it's VR, it could be infinite, right? It could just be growing. And the way it would grow is all you have to do is reach out to the edge of the universe and the universe will expand again, right? As long as you have unlimited computing capacity, right? Like those games that you play when you're walking around and the map reveals itself as you push the boundary of the map, right? The universe could be one of those things, which would be super cool. Black holes are generally terrifying though. Lonely piggy, how are you doing? Lonely piggy, ginger, sugar-coated ginger. Super delicious. I'm having a serious snack on these things. Very yummy. Cheryl, how are you doing? Welcome, welcome to our Monday political talk point. Yeah, Mobius band. Yeah, Mobius band. Yeah, Mobius band. Super cool. Cheryl, I was thinking that Joseph meant backwards in tech ability. Oh, is that what it means, Padre? Yes, like a torus. Like a torus. Mobius band or torus? It's called torus, right? Which one's a Mobius band then? Mobius band goes like this, like a torus to a certain degree, right? No, torus is the inside out. Yeah, no, torus. Mobius band is the other guy. That would be super cool, Padre. That would be super cool. And crystallized ginger. Yeah, Cheryl, love it, love it, love it. Like, fantastic. Your mouth feels amazing, amazing. When you eat like crystallized ginger. So good. And then drink tea. Like, oh yeah. Joseph, this tech evolved us and it will be the end of us. Possibly. Possibly. Love, laugh out loud. Procedural generations. Procedural generation, not sure what that means. Joseph, yeah, Cheryl, I was referring to something along those lines. Backwards and tech ability. Backwards and tech, okay. So we're moving backwards and tech, are we? I don't know. I don't know. Thank you for the follow again, by the way. I think I'm missing some of them. Because it pops up here for me, but I'm reading the chat over here. I know you guys see the chat over here, but it pops up here. Plutonic Plurus, the question of something out of nothing or something from something. That's the ultimate question, right? And if it's something from something, then what was that something? Oh, my God. I assumed you meant return to Amish kind of existence, Amish kind of existence to Joseph, Joe, Chico. Not really mathematics, but I've been learning a lot about evolution recently. One of my favorite subjects, along with genetics, yeah. Evolution is interesting. I looked at it a long time ago. And as geophysicists, we took paleontology and geochemistry and stuff like this. There's lots of cool stuff there, right, with evolution. One of the main problems or assumptions in paleontology and geology and just our science right now is that it's based on one of the core theories, assumptions that it has is the law of uniformity. I was never able to pronounce this correctly unless I see the word law of uniformity, which basically states that the rate of change that is occurring at the present was the rate of change that was occurring in the past, i.e., time, the rate at which time changes, moves forward, is the same rate that time was moving forward in the past. So one second now was equivalent to one second in the past. And that's a pretty big assumption. That's a pretty big assumption as far as I was concerned. A lot of the professors and books and people I talked to when I brought up this problem that I had with this huge assumption was that of course it does, right? Of course the rate of change is the same, was the same in the past as it is now. But to me that is not an of course thing, right? Because your rate of change, time, can vary based on the forces of gravity that you're under as well as acceleration. So if you vary the acceleration and or the mass of the universe or your surrounding, then the rate of change, right, time will vary for you relative to someone else that's not around that field. So to me that assumption in paleontology and geology and sciences in general is a huge assumption. That's why I really don't dismiss many theories about the origins of life in the universe and humanity and stuff like this, right? First time chat. Kaiser's, wow what a name, KYZERXRSZ. Kaiser, Kaiser, Kaiser. I don't understand math very well but want to learn now. Awesome Kaiser. It takes time, it's an important language and if you don't understand math, start from here, the real number set, okay? And I have a video out there talking about the real number set that relates it to sheep herding, herding sheep, sheep herders in a village. I would say start with the real number set, understand how to deal with fractions which are rational numbers, okay? And then understand how to move around an equal sign. Get into the space where you can move around an equal sign and once you understand that, then you can delve into functions because functions are just equal signs with two variables, minimum two variables and actually one variable, I guess you could have it, but let's call it two variables, right? X and Y that sort of try to or use to understand systems. Joseph out to Elder God, if I could grow a beard, I would fit in brother, unfortunately still rocking the three baby hairs on my chin. No, no, math can be fun in the Padre. Yeah, can't I, yeah, I can't prove it though. I just think it attempts to answer the question of what we are expanding into. That's a great question. What are we expanding into? Where? Crazy questions. Love these questions, right? Astronomy was one of the things I wanted to go into. I was initially actually went into the realm of geophysics. I started studying geophysics because I wanted to get into astronomy and then I went into environmental geophysics. I like the hands-on part of it. Joseph, that's what you get from being Australian, no beard. Ah, really? Austrian, not Australian. Austrian, Austrian, you guys don't grow good beards? Really? I didn't know that. And gang, don't forget. Free Assange, Free Assange, Free Assange. Julian Assange is a publisher and journalist that has been crucified for trying to bring transparency and accountability of capitalist power to humanity. For more information, see wikilees.org, defend.wikilees.org or Julian Assange and Wikilees playlists on the censor too. Plutarch Polaris, Peter Thiel has the theory that we, besides some islands, are in a stagnant phase of technological development. Possibly, I think we're about to see a major evolution, major discoveries or release of technologies into our society. I hope so anyway. Plutarch Polaris, can you believe, can you believe in life from flashes and energy bursts with chemistry? Can you believe in life or can you create life, you mean? Can you create life from flashes and energy bursts with chemistry? I don't know what. Plutarch Polaris, that didn't make sense to me. Ingeology, Catatrophism versus Uniformism. Yeah, to a certain degree, I remember those two phrases. Joseph, full head of hair with no beard versus full beard with no hair. Opinions, even though we're all unique and amazing. Ah, it varies. I wouldn't want a full set of hair now. Really, I used to have a huge bow. I was a headband, right? Long, long-ass hair, curly, long-ass hair, right? And usually always had a moustache, either mustache, goatee, beard, or whatever, right? But I wouldn't grow long hair again, if I could, which I can't, on the head anyway. I like the slick look. I like the slick look. Padre, I think the breaks had to be pumped a little bit. Once we created the atomic bomb, we got a little scared when we realized we could blow ourselves up. The influx of media and just noise in general could be a distraction in order for us to catch up to the technology, possibly. And I agree. And one of the most frightening things right now in terms of technology is, and it's ridiculous. We need to seriously put breaks on it, is all this gene therapy and manipulation of genes and creating Frankenstein science. We're messing with the core building blocks of nature, and we have no idea, zero idea with the long, mid, even short, short, mid, or long-term implications of this thing are. So there's a lot of math scientists right now going, trust us. Well, I've been around scientists all my life, and math, I don't trust 80% of those scientists. They don't know. Their assumptions are crap. Their conclusions are crap. Their data collection is crap. Scientists are just like human beings. Some of them do good work. Some of them do bad work. If you're building a house, right, thank you very much for this up Mojo tab Sanchez. If you're building a house, you can't just hire any plumber and any electrician to build, to put the plumbing electrical electricity in there, right? You want to get the best. Okay. Just like any trade, there are good tradesmen. There are bad tradesmen in science as well. There are good scientists. There are bad scientists. When people blindly close their eyes and say, the science says this, and I turn to them and said, whose science are you looking at? Whose data are you looking at? The science doesn't say shit. You have to look at all the information and the debate and the discussion and realize that science evolves over time as we acquire more data. That's one of the problems with our collapsing centralized indoctrination centers and why people need to be littered in the language of mathematics is because they're treating science as a religion now, which is insane, which is crazy. Have faith in the science. Have faith in what? What are you talking about? Have faith in the science that those two words, faith and science, should never be spoken in the same sentence. All right, crazy. Cheryl, I get why it's required for this discussion. Otherwise, it would be impossible to have rational discussions. There would always be that one guy tossing in some extreme examples. That wasn't a reply. It's something else, but it feels a little silly as an absolute. Nox, we, I'm balding with no beard growth whatsoever. Feels bad, man. Oh, no. By the way, I started balding when I was like, I started losing hair when I was 17. So don't worry too much about it, gang. Because at the time I couldn't grow a full beard, 16, 17, and slowly it kicked in. So there is hope. There is hope. There is hope. Joe, I was thinking about evolution and how to release to AI. If we do create an AI, I think it will come about by evolution and not and natural selection. And we will lose our ability to understand how it works long before it becomes human level. I think it will be too complicated for us to engineer it ourselves and it needs to evolve on its own. Here's an example, Joe. I'm going to keep on reading your comment here. That's how neural networks are trained already and even basic neural networks are too complicated for us to understand. When the first AI beat the world Go champion back in 2015, it was making decisions that even its creators couldn't understand. Yeah. And here's, here's an example, Joe. There's an economist, sort of commentator that I follow. And if you've been around, you know this person is Martin Armstrong, right? And he's written code that's like, he created this software, this code, right? AI, he calls it. He mentions, he refers to it as the true, the only true AI out there right now, right? But he came up with this code that predicts economic activity, global economic activity. 40 years ago, he put this code together, right? He got into computer science in the 60s and stuff like this and in the 1980s, he had this program and it's been evolving ever since, right? And Martin Armstrong is the most accurate, let's say he is the most accurate predictor of global economic events that I've ever come across. He's bang on on his analysis, but he will state this always. He's not doing in the analysis. His program, his AI is doing the analysis and he doesn't understand how the AI comes up with some of the conclusions that the AI comes up with, because he thinks that would never happen and they end up happening. So he's, he's come out and said that he doesn't understand what his program is doing, but his program track record is so phenomenal that you can only look at the information coming out and say, okay, that's what it's predicting. And more often than not, way more often than not, it is extremely accurate even to the day of those predictions. So I tend to agree, AI, and I don't think it's going to be absolute AI with consciousness. I think it's AI in terms of AI analyzing certain that are that is designed for, right? Designed to be operating and analyzing a certain system, right? Maybe for Martin Armstrong and economic system, geopolitical economic systems, right? It doesn't have the ability to get into the concept of love and or art aside from the value of art, the economic aspect of it, right? So I don't think we're anywhere close to conscious AI, but I think we do have programs out there, machine learning programs out there that can understand system and predict certain events for certain systems way better than we can, without a doubt, without a doubt, right? That's why there are multiple programs running out there that people have written code where they do stock trading, automated stock trading. But as Martin Armstrong would say, that all works fine and dandy until there's a liquidity crisis in the fall singles, right? Joe has beard, though, lonely picking on growing my hair out right now, but it's so thick. Whenever I wash it, I end up with an Afro vibe when it dries. Nice. The Afro vibe is great, brother. Where are we at? Where are we at? I'm missing some chat. Just the same. That's how natural. Joe, just the same. We took billions of years of evolution for our brains to develop. I don't think we are anywhere near smart enough to create a human level AI all by ourselves. It will need to evolve somewhat. Yeah. Yeah, for sure. We're nowhere near it. Padre, sorry, bro. I typed this out on my phone, so I missed some words sometimes. No worries, Padre. Gene therapy has opened up Pandora's box and it will be chaotic. I agree. 100% with Padre. This gene therapy, gene editing stuff is very problematic. Very problematic. We're on the same level. We're in the same space that we are right now, or we were doing the atomic age when the atomic age rolled out. I think when it's all said and done in 20 years, we're going to have treaties between nations, hardcore treaties punishable by enforceable by serious punishments between nations regarding gene editing and gene theory and what can cannot be done because we've unleashed some nasty shit in our societies in the natural environment, right? Plotard plurals. AI may accelerate everything, but it could also still be more marketing than substance. It's interesting indeed. Right now, it's mainly marketing. All these people are AI. They're not AI. They're programs written by somebody and they have serious problems with those programs. Oh, my God. Gender confusion needs to be addressed. Ronnie, all these professionals aren't capable to do good thorough jobs. The processes aren't good to even allow good scientists to do good jobs. Yeah, I agree with you in large part, and then they don't even debate good scientists, right? When a scientist says that trust my word because I am science and I refuse to debate any other scientist, that's a cult leader. It's not a scientist. I'm going to skip what you call it, the political stuff gang. First time chat. Oh yeah, you did the sub. Thank you very much for the follow. Thank you very much for the follow. You really remind me of search tanking off a system of down bad. Such a cool guy. Thanks. I'm a cool guy. I don't know about search though, but I did go off on the system of down a lot. If you do a search for chicho system of down review, go to duck duck go, just do a search for chicho system of down review. I wrote an article, a review of their music back in 2006, I believe, and it's a phenomenal review of system of downs music. It's awesome. And I've been to two of their shows concerts by the way. I'm 30 knocks. I'm 36 now though. So I don't think, oh no, you can't grow beer 36. The genetics might be a little different, not conducive to growing huge beers. Padre, as far as hair, beers go, you got to work with what you got. Indeed, play the cards, you're dealt gang. That's what it is, right? Ronnie, a lot of science is judgment based. It's funny how we were taught science and math are irrefutable, and yet when we incorporate randomness due to whatever reason, lack of data, et cetera, it becomes judgment based and it stops being science. Yeah. And here's the thing. There's a huge difference between science and mathematics. Math is a language syntax. It's not a thing for debating if two plus two is equal to four. You can sort of define it. Are you talking about vector system vectors or scalars, right? And that changes the answer to a certain degree, right? But there's limitations on it. Okay. Mathematics is a hardcore language. It's syntax based. It's not a faith system. There aren't too many assumptions in it, aside from the five axioms I was built on. And that's it. Math is just math. It's not an opinion mathematics. Science uses the language of mathematics to look at the world around us. And a lot of science has a lot of assumptions and there's a lot of falsely data and a lot of science being presented. And there's a lot of politics, economics and science being presented right now. So science, when you're conducting science, you really have to look at that scientific research with a fine toothpick to make sure that it's not propaganda or sales pitch. Okay. I meant, do you think that life began by energy meeting chemicals and an organic chemistry becoming organic? Ah, good question. So do I think life began when energy began by energy meeting chemicals or an organic chemistry becoming organic? So basically, energy hitting a bunch of chemicals, free floating ions or molecules or whatever you want to call it. So basically, if life began when spark engaged chemicals, right? So you bring energy together with matter and you put it together and you get life. Don't know. Don't know. For me, all I know is I am not just this matter that I occupy. So there is spark there, right? So our brains are just electrical electricity going off, right? That's the way we communicate. That's the way we understand. That's what makes us alive. Your heart is pounding, right? If you take that energy away, this matter will not move, right? I won't be animated because the life is gone. Is what is energy removed from matter life? Would be one way we would have to ask this question. We know that matter without energy is not life, right? Like, for example, this is matter. It's chemicals, really, but it doesn't, it's not alive, right? So this does not have life, right? Me, I am matter and there are sparks. There's energy here. So I am life. Now the question is, if you move these sparks, this energy from this matter, is it still life? Or is the energy just energy, just like this is matter, right? So to have life, do we have to have a merging of energy and matter? Good question. I guess the way to answer that question is for us to find out if energy is life. And if we ever come across energy beings that are just pure energy, but they're conscious, then that would answer our question, really, right? And it would be energy is really the life animating the matter. Sort of rationalizing my way through that, right? Cool thought though. Love the thought. Oh, I'm missing a lot of chat. Yeah, 19, I started losing my hair when it was, yeah, 17, 18, 19. It was traumatic at the time. Someone with a headbanger, long hair, listened to metal music, going to metal shows and stuff like this. It was like, oh crap. What do I do? Well, nothing grow long ass beard. It's genetic on your mother's side. Is it genetic on mother's size growing hair? If mother's dad is bald, it's quite likely. Well, yeah, yeah, I found that one out long time ago. Ronnie, it's probably who it comes from. Could be mom or dad, hair, hair, hair, platonic blurs. Will quantum computing make a general difference, quantum leap, or just in some special areas? Or will binary still rule? In our world, binary rules right now. Quantum computing, I think we're way off from quantum computing. You know, people are saying, yeah, we already have quantum computing. I don't think we're there yet. But again, I'm not a specialist. I'm not up to date with all the most recent stuff. I just read some of the information coming out, right? Knox, that's who probably works. One thing I realized going on these live streams and making these videos, I realized how much people love facial hair and hair in general. How much hair discussion there is, which is fantastic. There's a lot of beard discussion on the chat. That's cool. Ronnie, you said it's your mother, like it's certain. If you want to be as smart as with some other, okay, they're going off on the thing. Cheecho the hair stream. Cheecho the hair stream, how the God says, hair and life. Why not? Hilarious. Oh, man, we're coming close to the end of the stream. Wow, hilarious. Joe, Cheecho. There's a documentary series on Netflix called unnatural selection. Very fascinating. It follows a number of genetic engineering projects, including a child receiving gene therapy to prevent degenerative eye disorder. Someone receiving gene therapy for paralysis. A scientist who releases genetically engineered mice on an island in New York, New England, to get rid of mosquitoes. Oh my God. Someone genetically engineering animals in his garden highly recommended. Wow, some of that sounds like mad scientists. Like any scientist that genetically engineers an animal and releases it into nature should be arrested and put in jail. Their research should be scrutinized, should be looked at, and for us to figure out what this scientist just did. Okay, because doing something like that is so irresponsible, it's beyond belief. It's beyond belief. And just imagine trying to kill off the mosquitoes with mice. And mosquitoes, one of the most important animals in the biosystem, right? Insanity. That to me sounds like a mad scientist that should not be allowed to practice science. Ronnie, I mean that time because check this out. Rises on an island. As if the island is an island of its own. That from that island, nothing from that island can go anywhere else. Right? Crazy. Crazy to me. Ronnie, I mean that type of practical side of math. I work in insurance and use math to assess risk. It doesn't feel like math anymore. Yeah, it's just language that you're using to decipher the world. It's beautiful. Amazing. Mojtaba, Sanchez. That's amazing. That first look, I guess, you must be related to search. What kind of Armenian face style? I know. Yeah, we're both Armenian, right? We're both Armenian. And I used to know almost all the lyrics to all of System of Down's Music, by the way. I loved it. I love it. Right? Hello, mate. RJM players. First time chat. Hello, hello. How are you doing? And welcome to our live stream. Hello, God. This body is only a shell. You cannot touch me. You cannot harm me. I am not afraid. Nice. Who said that? My soul is me, not my flesh. Nice. Or simply put, hair today, hair today, gone tomorrow. Hold on, let me just hold her gun. Joe Chicho, I can't remember whether it was to kill the mosquitoes or make them immune to something. Apparently, there is an issue with mosquitoes in New England, with mosquitoes infecting people with something innocurable. It was to prevent that somehow. Yeah, but releasing into the wild genetically modified rodents. And rodents are breed like mad. The rodents will be around way longer than human beings will be around this planet. I think that's crazy. I think that's crazy. Cheryl, I am a mosquito magnet. Haha. I suffer as a result, but still only support extreme cold and getting rid of standing water as prevention. Yeah. Scary stuff done for human comfort. Indeed, Cheryl. I agree. And Cheryl, one of the other things you can do to get mosquitoes night not to bite you or suck your blood, right, is I don't recommend this, but have smoke around you, right? When we used to go to geophysics, when we did the fieldwork a lot and stuff, there are times where I took cigars with me to areas where there might have been a lot of mosquito activity and you light up a cigar. Now, you got to be careful in nature and stuff like this. But when there's mosquitoes around, usually the area is in general moistish, right? Mosquitoes love water, standing water anyway. So if you wanted to get a little relief from mosquito bites, you light up a cigar. My partner, some of the people at geophysics, I went to, there was smoke cigarettes. I don't like cigarettes. So I would light up a cigar and smoke cigars and the mosquitoes would not come around, not as many anyway. Plutonic blurs. I refuse to accept that .99999999 is equal to one. It's not. Joke. The guy with the animals in the backyard was using a generic engineering kit that you can buy online. Are you serious? No, dude. I didn't know this. I got a lot. I got to check out this documentary. Yikes. Oh my God. I'm really trying not to talk politics. The Munich Security conference is making me mad but we talk politics current events two days three days from now so and the and personal finance we can definitely talk about some of that stuff too Sanchez wow you're an Armenian too so cool so cool but if buddy here in Europe we have some talk for us here in Europe we have windy days currently I like it is relatively harmless in wind velocities mostly yeah yeah wind is one of the best things you could have to not get mosquitoes Joe all Lyme disease the mice with Lyme disease and here's a kicker with Lyme disease Lyme disease was mainly an engineered disease right from the military US military I looked into this before actually 99% sure Lyme disease came from an island was it the same island it was a military biological weapon project that was released the hark 94 first time chat coconut oil helps to keep them away already coconut oil calps keeps mosquitoes away very cool very cool sithberry I tend to think the best thing humans can do for Earth is leave which is why we need heavy investment space type the problem with that is your military militarizing space even Elon Musk stuff is militarization right sure yeah that's ticks Lyme is awful been there done that ticks are a huge issue too yeah yeah oh you had Lyme too Ronnie yeah I've known other people that have a lot that had Lyme some people it's devastating right some people is devastating and it takes a few years to come out of it you need to do hardcore anti from what I understand this is not medical but you need to do hardcore antibiotic treatment you need to cleanse yourself you need to do a lot of things you need to do a lot of things yeah unfortunate your resonance how are you doing when are we talking about stocks and options we're doing it this week go to my patreon page go to the patreon page and the pin comment right now the pin post right now is our schedule for this week we had a current events live stream yesterday this is our mathematics we got five more streams coming up I think tomorrow we do a comic book reading and then we do personal finance I can't remember but look look on the patreon page and the list is there and it's on our discord in a schedule folder okay so we are doing personal finance and we can talk about options and we did talk about options by the way we did a personal finance we did talk about options are we in for a market crash if Russia invades Ukraine I don't think Russia is gonna invade Ukraine and we're in for a market crush no matter what such as by the way I'm from by the way it's depends the things might go up there you have you can play long and short so don't get don't get it wrong on this such as by the way I'm from north of Iran on away second year of software engineering struggling with math same as many of us you're from north of Iran what are you talking about Iranian math is powerful man I was born in Tehran by the way Salam Aleppo Westin I'm Armenian from Iran so Sanchez but your math should be ridiculously powerful right but if you're in second year of engineering yeah the university math kicks up right so they catch up a university to Iran but the foundation high school is crazy so powerful in Iran Cheryl to Ronnie oh man I'm sorry to hear it I know I was fortunate that I tested positive tins of tons of friends who work in the field have had have joint symptoms etc and some docs won't treat them just in case tons yeah yeah it's crazy I've known some people with a line it could be debilitating big time so talk for a Chico we could have a great high astan streams somewhere somewhere with Armenian culture cooking jokes well I've done some Armenian cooking I've done some Armenian cooking and we've done the backgammon live streams that's huge Armenian I played I did live streams couple live streams I think anybody I put videos out playing backgammon with grandma and did a live stream playing backgammon with grandma that's pure Armenian right Joe Chico I thought Lyme disease was incurable no you can you can I don't know if you get rid of it permanently but you can recoup from it but you can't let it debilitate you huge right you have to get on it fast and hard I know someone that has recovered from it almost a hundred percent she had a long time ago took a few years and I know someone that still struggling with it big time I'm lucky I think but I heard symptoms can appear later in life symptoms can appear later in life so Ronnie to Cheryl it was my sheer bad luck I never went thinking but I did with a friend once we decided to go off trail and I got a bite this was like five years ago and not no bad symptoms really I'm lucky I think but I heard symptoms can appear later in life your resident thanks my pleasure my pleasure Allah God investing in personal finance oh we're so we're doing investing in personal finance tomorrow cool oh yeah we're doing it on 22 22 22 awesome what a day to do investing in personal finance then so gang we're doing an investing in personal finance tomorrow from 2 to 4 p.m. so we can talk about investing personal finance stock market options and stuff like this I'll give you my opinion my take I won't have any presentations available like I won't I won't have any screenshots or anything I don't think I will you know if I can put something together by then I will but I think it's just going to be more of a discussion since Barry if the market crashes should I buy the dip depends on what you're buying right I wouldn't buy a Twitter disclaimer family has put some Twitter funny oh we're almost at the end of the stream gang gang I'm scrolling down going down going down so you're shorting the market what's triggering the coming crash inflation the interest rate increases I wouldn't say we're shorting the whole market family is long cannabis long Nvidia long coin along one other couple other things and puts on a number of other sectors okay yeah I was disappointed no cooking stream was in the set but I guess this is space issue it is a space issue right now and I thought about putting a cooking stream in there but we had a lot of other things we could do that we're doing all kinds of things so that's okay but definitely we will be doing cooking streams soonish I think put time for us I'm also rooting for cooking stream but may come in March I think we'll do one in March spring I think we're gonna start doing the cooking Joe Chicho I'll post it on this court page the documentary is called unnatural selection I watched it on Netflix a couple of years ago I hope it's still on there cool and no worries if it's not on there but pretty sure I could find it online somewhere Ronnie I see I tested negative but is this something that I should get tested periodically you think fingers crossed no symptoms come back yes to do to do to do well the God should be an interesting day tomorrow again with the markets really tomorrow I think that's the reason I set it up for tomorrow because the markets are closed today on Monday it's some kind of president's day in the United States and in Canada as well tomorrow the market opens in Canada United States could be very interesting weekend in Barney's how we doing Chicho what's your experience with thermodynamics I've done some but I forgotten all of it man weekend of Barney's dude I did hydrogeology thermodynamics and stuff like this now I even took I think one graduate core graduate course in hydrodynamics but I forgotten at all I know the basic principles but the mathematics and the intricacies of it no Cheryl pro tip regarding ticks okay pro tip regarding regarding ticks from a gal who trumps around stream areas forests and pastures keep a tape roller the lint roller kind in your car or pack then as soon as you get back use the roller over your whole body and outside outside of gear it picks up Eve it picks up even the teeny tiny guys so helpful really so one of those rollers the flint the forgetting rid of like pet hair and stuff that kind of stuff Cheryl one of the tape rollers I gotta get one of those Sanchez that's crazy man I kind of felt that you may be related to Iran are you related to Esfahan Armenians or Tabry's ones anyway Kelly Kelly Koshan show them I have a hard time reading Armenian and Farsi that's written in English so he was Hosham means I'm very happy such as a saying and I was born in Tehran but I lived in southern Iran on the Iraq border in Huzestan one of the few Armenians that lived there they got when I grew up I didn't have any Armenian friends there was no other Armenians there all my friends were Iranian I grew up as an Iranian Armenian we just spoke at home right so I was at the basically on the desert part of the Arabian desert grew up in the desert down there phenomenal space to be in brother phenomenal space to be in Ronnie is quite possible that you're not infected but pay attention to things that are known long-term symptoms that can't be attributed to overactivity cold weather joints will ache as you age etc just keep keep track wow wow wow yeah thanks Cheryl for the info let's read more Cheryl my pleasure sorry if too much info I get excited when I actually know something awful that's a lot of helpful that's good yep pet hair lint roller duct tape wrapped around your fingers works to okay like a hand-sized tape doc okay okay okay desert planet chichol muah muah dude cool thanks for the tip Cheryl thanks for the tip for the tip maybe for tomorrow market open we should go all in vex haha Ronnie Joe chichol could you do a really brief explanation of the arithmetic average or the mean I understand how to calculate it I'm just having a oh brother how having a hard time understanding exactly what the number tells us about a data set well it's just like basically you're multiplying things out let me raise this this is gonna be really quick rather so for if I get you correctly so for example if you're taking a let's say 20 30 40 right let's say you just want the average of this average you're gonna go 20 plus 30 plus 40 and divided by 3 right so that's gonna be what is a 50 90 so equals 90 divided by 3 is equal to 45 that's the average of those three numbers right but let's assume these are exams that you're writing and towards the final mark this is worth this is worth 15% of your final mark this one is worth 20% of your final mark and this one's worth what is that 35 65% of your final mark so what you do to calculate the weighted average you take this and multiply it by this so it's going to be 20 times 0.15 plus 30 times 0.20 plus 40 times 0.65 and then divide this whole thing by 3 I believe I haven't done this for a long time so it gives you it weights the stuff accordingly so it distributes the weight right which is important to do which is important to do do you have any photos from where you grew up yeah family albums and stuff but I don't really keep them I don't look at them really I'm not a nostalgia type of person look in the past this was this I just go I was amazing time let's move forward right let's enjoy the moment but yeah I do I do a mom let me rephrase mom does a mom does what's the most important of the Greeks when when it comes to options according to you question from Sweden and this is someone I mentioned this for me the beta the the movement I always forget what the names are for the options the which ones what but for me is how fast it moves right I think that's the beta right because with the beta with the how fast the volatility of the stock is the ones that are very volatile or the ones that really pay out well pay out well right the returns are good as well the ones that aren't very volatile are good to hedge your bets against right is to hedge because if you're wrong in a certain type of market crash or market pop then those those options retain their value more than the ones that fluctuate a lot right let's trade bit going to but we can talk about this tomorrow Joe Chisholm so the numbers bigger than the average are balanced against the numbers lower than the average yeah yeah that's what average does yeah that's natural there are mostly Arabs in Uzbekistan I traveled to Avaos yeah once to visit some friends such a kind yeah it was an amazing place Sanchez I grew up in this food and the Mexican desk full full-on very amazing amazing place to grow up man amazing place to grow up options are really tough because we try predict future price of underlying securities but all the time super tough super tough are you gonna lose money on options certain options you buy you're gonna lose money but that's why you distribute and you wait right Vegas the volatility Vega is the volatility okay Vega is the volatility so I do I like the Vega is a Vega volatility no I gotta look into these things it's just becoming Tura for me now right mom's usually do haha yeah for pictures I was trying to visualize how different it would have been then compared to now huge huge huge options mom usually like teacher 18 or now how do you decide whether to use the mean or the median or mode mean is mean is like average median is the middle number and mode is the most frequent number so if you're thinking about mean if you're gonna use the mean or mode you wouldn't because mean is a different different measured in the mode mode is the one that appears the most right mean the mode could be way different than the mean the one that you should really look at if you want to decide which one to use is the mean or the median that the median is the middle number and that depends on the data set right that depends on the data set other God when I see old clothes I wear I always say no way that I wear that haha sometimes I say right on I wore that gang let's call the stream let's call the stream thank you for being here thank you for discussions fun fun mastery talked about everything including facial hair gang if you want to follow this work I'm on patreon patreon.com for size Chico CHYCHO I'm gonna support this work if you want to know what this work is about you can follow the work on Patreon I don't want to think behind paywall everything's great of common share and share I like thank you Jota Haro for the follow for those of you that are supporting this work on patreon gang thank you very much for the support it is in a large part because of your support that we're able to do what it is that we are doing as well as the support that we're getting on twitch which is where we're live streaming so if you want to participate in the chat twitch is where you want to be at and gang thank you for being here thank you for discussion thank you for the follows thank you for the subs thank you for everything right thank you for the love and mods thank you for being here we could not be doing this without your support we do announce these live streams 30 minutes before we go live on mines vk gap parlor getter and parlor we said mines vk gap parlor getter and bit cloud and we do have a discord page you can come to our chat anytime you want in on twitch in our chat and type in exclamation mark discord or exclamation mark social and the invite for the discord page will be there we've got like a thousand people that are sharing information there which is fantastic I try the goods to thank you very much gang for being here my pleasure my pleasure I spoke to someone who only looked at the yeah the role and said that was the most important but that is the interest rate isn't that the least important yeah to me I looked at that it someone else brought this up as well I didn't know what that was initially I thought I knew and then I looked it up and I went oh no that's something different I wouldn't consider that to be the most important tell you truth interest rate or something it's when when you're doing options just think about this for me when I'm doing options one of the best plays you can make if there is high volatility stock and the markets in turmoil you could straddle a stock just before their earnings right a couple of days before the earnings sometimes they go down by the calls right and they go up by the puts right try to get at a good price and then they usually fluctuate at a certain level and if there is high movement with the stock they either pop or they drop and that movement is where you make the coin right gang what are we doing for live streams we don't have any visuals we do upload the audio sound called the comfort slash sound sound sound called the comfort slash chichou chy chou is a podcast and those podcasts should be available in favorite podcasting platform and coolings Spotify opt-toons and Google play and we will be uploading this live stream to censor to bitch you to rumble and to Odyssey so you can find all of our content on bitch you rumble and Odyssey and not everything on censor to we don't load everything on censor to anymore right because the censors don't like it we need we're being shadow band and people are being on subscribe without them knowing they're being unsubscribed and all that jazz so you know our main effort is going on bitch you rumble and Odyssey but for anyone supporting our work in any of these platforms getting thank you very much for the support and if you can make it tomorrow afternoon 2 p.m. my time West Coast Pacific time we're doing investing in personal finance and we got five more streams coming up in the next five days and the reason why set up these seven streams for these seven days is because I'm following the lead from the trucker convoy and they called for a general strike and I canceled all of my students this week okay and I decided to do live streams so I sent a message to all of my students I said this week no teaching no mathematics I didn't tell them why because I don't want to introduce politics in my lessons for mathematics but you guys are involved in the whole whole deal so just so you know the reason we're doing seven live streams this week that I had the time to do it is because I've joined the general strike for the Canadian truckers and canceled everybody and we're gonna share information aside from that gang if you can make it I'll see you in one of the seven days one of the remaining five days of streaming that we have going on bye for now everybody