 Let's check it out. Let's check it out. Nice. There we are. Awesome. Awesome. We are live. We are live. Hi, everyone. This is Gio. Welcome to my channel and welcome to the live stream. Today, today is March 5th, 2023, and we're doing our drop in math tutoring session number, number 83. I believe. Number 83. There's more. There's more. But official count is 83. I hope you're doing well. And this is sort of us making time for to teach a little bit of mathematics every I was doing it every week. We've dropped the ball on that one because I got busy with just different things and whatnot. So we haven't done one for a couple of months at least, but we're going to get back into more of a regular routine going into the new year. Or not new year. Well, beginning of the new year anyway, we're in March. So a couple of months into the new year. This is the first one we've done this year, I think. Anyway, book tonic pluralist. Hello, hello. You're doing well and welcome to a nice chill math live stream. While we wait for notifications to go out, I'm going to give my little intro. Lark Bark. How are you doing? Hello, buddy. What's up, my man? And to everyone. Hello, hello, hello. Esquil, Lord Esquil. How are you doing? Good evening to you as well. Good early afternoon. I've been munching on pomegranates. I already had a little bowl of pomegranates and I mixed this one with apples and I put in a little bit of dried mint on top. Pomegranates that I just this morning bought a whole bunch put them in a big bowl. I brought the big bowl to show you guys. As soon as I did it, I had a nice bowl of it and then with apples and mint. Fantastic. So good, so good. And pomegranates seeds by themselves are fantastic, but I like eating them with apples and different types of fruits as well, right? And the mint on top. So good. So good. Here's the bowl of pomegranates. I topped up this morning. It's really good pomegranate season. This is the second bowl we've had or we're having. We already had one and a half bowls. So basically this was eight large pomegranates. So good, so good. And when you start eating it at the bottom, the liquid pomegranate just starts building up. So when you get to the bottom, you can just drink the pomegranates. That's so good. And this of course with yogurt and in cereals and stuff that we've done before. Very delicious, very delicious. I hope you guys have good snacks. I hope you guys have good snacks. Shirtless Kylo, how are you doing? I've been a while, kept up on YouTube, but glad I'm here for a stream. Awesome, awesome shirtless. By the way, you're not getting all the videos that we've been uploading on YouTube, which is fine, which is fine, right? But a lot of the political controversial stuff cannot be loaded on CensorTube. I do try uploading them every now and then. The shadow banning on CensorTube is crazy, right? You know, I load on something that is not approved by CensorTube sensors, the technocrats, and all of a sudden we start losing subscribers. And it's not people just on subscribing. I just had someone yesterday come up to me and say, on CensorTube, send a message saying, oh, I'm so glad I found you again, Chicho. For some reason, now I realize why I'm getting notifications. I don't get notifications from CensorTube, by the way, at all, anything, anywhere. But he said, I don't get notifications from you because CensorTube, he called it YouTube, unsubscribing without me knowing. I go, yeah, I've had a few of these messages over the last three, four years, right? So just a heads up. If you want to see everything that we do, you want to be on, you want to be on, you want to be on, you want to be on, but you were rumble and odyssey. That's where we upload everything. Oh, you would kill as, as kill good pomegranate season. The first batch that came in at the beginning of winter wasn't that good. This is the third batch that I've caught anyway. So the first batch of pomegranates wasn't that good. The second batch was really good. This third batch is fantastic. Super good, super good. Yeah. And with nuts, plutonic pullers for sure. And with the nuts, with walnuts is amazing. I love pomegranates, pomegranates seeds with walnuts. Pomegranate seeds with apple, pomegranate seed with apple and a little bit of mint, dried mint, like just from our yard that every year I harvest mint and dry it and put it in jars and I go through whatever we dried usually in the winter. We have some left over, but and we have videos of us drying mint, right? So good, so good. Let me take a look at this. You can't beat this. This is like ultimate snack, right? So delicious, so healthy, right? Eduardo, how are you doing? Marcos, hello, hello. Math lovers are in town, Eduardo. Lord Barker, how does that two delicious donuts nice? Oh, so sure, let's kind of teach you. I make sure to hit bit shoot or just re-watch on Twitch, laugh out loud. I've been watching long enough to know when I need to go to an out here platform to find something. Yeah, yeah, for sure, for sure. It's crazy. Sensor tube is in like, wow, it gets worse and worse on a daily basis now. It's so bad, so bad. Wow. Anyway, it is what it is, Lord Eskimo. It's 100% sensor tube blocking notification and shadow banning. Yeah, we've been shadow banning up the yin-yang hardcore crack. How are you doing afternoon? Yeah, pomegranate best. Super delicious. Super delicious. Hope you're doing well. Oh yeah, my little intro gang. If you want to follow this work on Patreon, Patreon.com, slash gcho, c-h-y-c-h-o. We also have a sub-stack page and a subscribe star page, so you can follow the work there. For those of you that are supporting this work on Patreon, gang, thank you very much for the support, for being there and following the work, as well as the support that we're getting on Twitch. It's mainly, not mainly, but the support we're getting on Patreon, on sub-stack, on Twitch, and a handful of people that are supporting us through living on sensor tube. Your support counts for a lot, gang. So I do appreciate it. Thank you for being here. Thank you for sticking around. Okay, it's an honor. It's an honor. And of course, mods that we have on Twitch and on Gilded, and just within our community. Salute to the mods, gang. Salute to the mods. Lark Park. Yeah, that's why everyone's jumping on Rumble. Yeah, big time, big time. Rumble, and Bichute, and Odyssey, and Rockfin, and whatnot. But for me, I'm mainly on Rumble, Bichute, and Odyssey. These are the main three platforms that I consume content on. They're the main three platforms. Yes, Gil, I remember years ago, I would get notifications for your videos, and the interaction was much more there. It's sensor tube shadow banning, like the entire channel, creepy stuff, creepy stuff, like creepy, like crazy creepy, right? Like, wow. Like, it makes you feel gross just watching videos there. Brett Slinger, thank you very much for the subscribe, for tier one sub. Subscribe for 19 months, currently on a 19-month streak. Salute, salute. Thank you for the support. Brett Slinger, love when I catch a Chit Show livestream. Awesome. Glad to have you. Glad to have you. And math is the core of what we do, right? So these streams are amazing to me. I love them. Plutonic Plurus, like, binge watch Chit Show play on the song of FrickTube, for giving Chit Show adverb money. Awesome. A lot of play. Loupid. Hilarious. Explorer. Thanks, Plutonic Plurus. You try and kick. You try and kick. Explore the world. You try and kick. I don't know what kick is. What's kick? Cheer you all. Cheer you all. Cheers. Cheers. Cheers gang. Cheers. Cheers. Again, we do announce these live streams 30 minutes, 45 minutes before we go live on Twitter, MindsGap, Parler, Gettr, and… Which one is the other one? I can't remember. A VK and VK, right? So you can follow the work there. And for live streams when we don't have any visuals, which we do for mathematics, we do upload some podcasts on soundcloud.com forward slash Chit Show. And those podcasts should be available in your favorite podcasting platform, including Spotify, iTunes, Google Play, Amazon, whatever you're following. It should be there. There are RSS links, or there's always… Right gang, we're doing mathematics. And of course we have a gilded community. You're definitely welcome to join us there. We left Discord a while ago because it started censoring, so we're not going to stick around the platform that censors, not for discussions, right? And we're on gilded. And it's a fantastic community that we have there. Let me take these guys down. Let me take these guys down. Chit Show, liqueur testing on YouTube for football. We're going to do one of those this spring, most likely this spring, this summer, for sure we're going to hit up the liqueur cabinet. I'm going to do a cleaning on it and sort things out and dust it and stuff like this. We sort of moved it over here and it's out of sight, out of mind. So we took her in the cure cabinet away from the cabinet that we had it on in the living room. So you just get up and help yourself with the cure. We put it in the sunroom over here and it's out of sight, out of mind, right? We tend to forget that the cures are there and have seps. So I need to go through thorough cleaning and consolidating and see what we got. And we're going to do a nice two to three hour sampling during a live stream. It's time we do another one. Probably have a cigar going at the same time. Oh, yeah. Okay, let's go do it. Explore. It's a platform which will give you 95% of your revenue weight. Yeah, I don't know it. I don't know it. Go to our Gilda server, link us up, and we'll take a look. Go to our Gilda server and link us up, either in general folder or multiple other folders, technology. We've got technology and light topics, heavy topics, heavy light topics, I guess, and link us up. Or if you're working for them, we have a promo self promotion folder. You can link it up there and be honest with us. If you work for something you believe in and you want to promote it, that's 100% fine with me, right? You're sharing your love. That's what creating content is. And I'm okay with people sharing platforms, their ideas and stuff that they believe in. So that's fine. Pirate in Paluto, salutations, salutations. I hope you're doing well. How are you doing? How are you doing? Any plans for a 10 by 10 puzzle? We got to do it, but I had planned on doing it, but then we started doing the world map, mapping world conflicts. So I took down the 10 by 10 puzzle. So we will do the summer, the 10 by 10 puzzle, for sure. But it's going to be delayed a little bit because I like having a map up. Me and my partner really like having a map up right now. And we're going to do a mapping world conflicts. Oh my God, are we doing? Welcome, welcome. We're going to do one more mapping world conflicts this Tuesday starting at 1pm. And then that's going to be the final part, it's part four of the mapping world conflicts for a few months, right? Because the next two to three months are ridiculously crucial in regards to geopolitics, domestic politics, and economics, and many other things, social structure of our societies. So we're going to keep that up for two to three months. And then once we're done with that, when certain things play out, they roll out, hopefully calm down. I doubt it is going to kick up. Then we'll put up the 10 by 10 puzzle. No matter what, turn down or kick up, we'll do the 10 by 10 puzzle in the summer. We'll put it back up again. That's where we are. I only have so many walls in the house that I can put up a big grid like that. We live in a house that it's got a lot of windows. So there aren't any too many big walls that I can do 10 by 10 puzzle. We went with mapping world conflicts, peanut butter, pumpkin parties, salutations, that will be awesome, awesome, awesome. Yeah, the other cure videos were one of my favorites, me too. I ended up smiling a lot towards the end. Big granamafes, right? Plutonic floors, the blackboard is off the way. Yay, all the gods here. And gang, do not forget, do not forget, Free Assange, Free Assange, Free Assange, Julian Assange, a publisher and journalist that has been crucified for trying to bring transparency and accountability of capitalist power to humanity, to me and you, something that we desperately need in our societies. Okay, for more information, see wikileaks.org, the fed dot wikileaks.org, countless resources online to get you caught up as to what's really going on. Ah, Elder God, you hopped on it right away. I don't even see it. Nice. At a time of, oh, Eskile, Eskile, you hopped on it right away. You're awesome, awesome, awesome. So gang, we're here for mathematics. Elder God, by the way, check this out. Check this out. My snack, my snack for today. I just like taking spoonfuls of this. That's not what I'm going to keep on showing it. Pomegranates, apples and dried mint. The dried mint I harvested from our garden and my dad's patio when I go visit him. Okay. And the pomegranates I picked up a couple of days ago, two or three days ago. Super delicious. Fantastic pomegranates. It's a really good pomegranate season this year. This is what I topped out this morning. Eight large pomegranates gave us this. So eight large pomegranates and this is a second bowl like this that we're having. A couple of months and a half ago, we had another one. I did another run to our pomegranate supplier. Really delicious. Very healthy. Lots of anti-oxidants. Very free. Very free. I can't really see. Wow, with yogurt, pomegranates and yogurt. Fantastic, right? Eskile looks so good. Now you're just making me jump. I gotta show it off. I gotta show it off. I gotta show it off. Gang, we're here to do mathematics, talk about education, we can do physics, whatever, or an open discussion. We can talk about what we want. We're gonna talk about pomegranates all stream if you like. Pyro and Pluto. I haven't had pomegranates in a while attempting me to get some. Yeah, it's really super good. It used to be a lot cheaper a few years ago. You could get the best price I got where I am in west coast of Canada. I was able to, in the past, pick up like three for five dollars, right? The best I ever got was four for five dollars. They were a little bit smaller, but four for five dollars. That's a dollar, 25 a pop. Fantastic, right? But right now these pomegranates are about three bucks a pop. So pretty on the expensive side, right? At least double in price in five years. So it is what it is. Deep flake, how you doing? How you doing? Welcome to our live stream. And gang, let me give a little notice regarding education. Since we're doing a math live stream and it's about education really. I mean, if we had a legit education system in our countries, I would be out of a job, which I'm okay with. If it was a legit education system, I would probably be working in the system teaching mathematics, but it's not a legit education system. Our current centralized schooling in at least Canada and the United States is exactly that. It's schooling. It's indoctrination, indoctrination. And five years ago or so, I was still recommending, I was still okay with kids being in school to learn social skills. And there was a little bit of education happening right now. It's not existent. They're abusing kids. They're brainwashing kids. It's pure indoctrination and it's detrimental to their health, to your family's health and to the society's health. So my recommendation to anyone that has children in school, pull them out, pull them out. Do not let the government brainwash your children. Do not let the government destroy your families. Do not let the government destroy our societies. It is complete 100% indoctrination. And a lot of parents know this already. A lot of people I've interacted with, they know this already. A lot of teachers know this. There's a lot of teachers that have left the system. There's a lot of parents that are homeschooling now. They're getting together with communities and forming collectives and teaching their children that way. By passing, protecting, that's a better word. Protecting their children from predators that are trying to make soldiers, but weird types of soldiers. Soldiers to push their centralized powers agenda. We're not talking about in general, we're not talking about soldiers that are sent to the front lines to wage wars against other nations. They're indoctrinating kids in the same way that there was actually a podcast linked up in our Gila server, which was fantastic. It was like a three hour podcast talking about it. And this we've known previously for a long time that this was coming, which is one of the reasons that I started. I never went into the full blown centralized indoctrination centers to teach mathematics. I did my own thing. This was clear. The direction that it was going 20 years ago, 20 plus years ago. I've been teaching privately mathematics, right? But basically, this is an indoctrination system the same on the same level as Marxism, as fascism, as Maoism. It's it's complete takeover of the mind of generations by centralized power to wage war on their own citizens. I know I'm going deep with this. My apologies. I know this is supposed to be just mathematics, but it is extremely related to education. It is education. And there's a reason why we need to do this, have these sessions to teach mathematics, because a lot of kids are not being taught critical thought, right? They're not being taught critical thought. They're being indoctrinated into a very brutal system. And you don't want your children to be a part of that. Okay, just need to get that out, because it's coming. It's becoming clearer and clearer where we are headed. And it's not pretty if we don't stop it. Crack. I use the math method as well for pomegranates. Oh, the tap method. Easy peasy. Well, easy peasy. It took me I listened to a podcast for about it was an hour podcast. It took me about 35 minutes to tap out eight large pomegranates. It's good for that. I used to play drums, right? So I'm good. I built up my these guys pretty good. So I can do this all day or used to be able to do it all day. I can do it at least for 35 minutes, tapping up pomegranates. Super delicious. Super delicious. Pyran Pluto. Yeah, here produce is pretty expensive. Yeah, crazy expensive. Crazy expensive. That's one of the reasons in summertime or fall, late summer, early fall. Well, for apples anyway, late summer, early fall. And midfall all the way to midfall. We, we've located a few apple trees that we hit up. So I pick a lot of apples, local apples, parks and beaches and fields and stuff like this. We got bags in the car. So pick up, pick a lot of apples because it's cheaper. It doesn't cost us anything except driving and a little exercise, right? Pick our own plums, pick a lot of blackberries every year, a lot of other fruits we pick. Me and my partner pick in the spring, fall and spring, summer and fall. And it saves you a lot of money. We're talking hundreds of dollars. It's saving you and it's giving you outdoor time and it's keeping you healthy and it's getting you to know your local community, right? Your local area. Fantastic. Fantastic. Plutoniporo is also across the nation. Decentralized education. Decentralized education. There are people getting together with collectives right now, hiring independent educators to teach like-minded parents that want to protect their kids from indoctrination and want to empower them to become free-thinking human beings. That's my main job by the way, aside from teaching mathematics, is to help kids to become critical thinkers, free, right? Oh my God, I fear for the current youth. There are some very intelligent people there but the indoctrination is crazy powerful again. It's crazy powerful. The woke, the agenda of wokeism pushed from centralized power is is intoxicating to a lot of youth which are trying to find a purpose in life, right? So as educators, for me anyway, my main purpose is to try to empower my students to decide their own fate, to find their own passions, to really have critical thought and to try to become independent and realize basically to build up their BS detectors, their bullshit detectors well enough to realize when they're being played with or they're being lied to, right? That's my main, one of the main things I try to teach my students and I don't, I don't imprint them with my philosophy of life. I imprint them with my tools that I've acquired in life which is a totally different thing, right? Centralized education tries to imprint, right? Kids in school with their ideology, with their doctrines, with their dogmas, with their with their agenda, right? And if there is a tool that will prevent kids from being brainwashed, they've pulled that out, right? They don't teach that anymore, which is what's happening with mathematics. They've cut the math curriculum. Like what they taught us in school, me in school like 40 years ago is what they're, compared to what they're teaching now, it's about 40% less now. 30 to 40% less content in a, take any grade, grade in high school, grade 8, 9, 10, 11 or 12, any grade there's 40% less content there than there was 40 years ago. There's 30% less content there than there was 20 years ago. That's right, 15 or 10 years, it's crazy, it's crazy, right? So that's what centralized power is trying to do and how we prevent them, right? We teach kids how to be free thinking human beings, critical thinkers. We build up their bullshit detectors, right? We teach them how to read data, how to read graphs, how to, how to smell the bullshit coming a mile away, right? Which is what mathematics does. Lord Eskild, as a history student myself, the very select part they teach in school says enough, yeah, it's really crazy, right? I don't know about the massacres my country committed until I researched it myself. In my opinion, they put heavy propaganda and lesson plans. Indeed, it's garbage. Like, by the way, what we're talking about learning education, it's not just math related. As Lord Eskild's pointing out, it's everywhere. It's history, history taught in, taught in centralized indoctrination centers. That's pure, pure indoctrination, pure indoctrination. It's crazy as well as current media propaganda. It's an attack on humanity from all fronts, right? Maybe your consumption of food, what you eat, maybe news you watch, maybe movies, TV shows, music. On every front, every front they're taking centralized power is taking taxpayer money from individuals, from a society, and the bureaucrats are deciding what to push on that society, right? In which direction. So this is top down management. It's slavery, right? Because the top control everything, not just government, right? Or bureaucracy, they control everything, right? They set up the school curriculums, they fund media, they fund movies, they fund projects, they fund artists, they fund everything, right? With the society's money, right? So if you don't have a voice in the society, I'll give you an example, by the way. This is straight up mathematics. Let's do some political mathematics again. Apologies if I'm not reading the chat. I'm just going to connect this up to mathematics, right? So check this out. In Canada, okay, political mathematics, this is where mathematics comes into play, right? Canada considers itself, right, states that Canada is a democracy, democracy, right? Okay, here's Canada. In the last elections in Canada, we had the following parties. We got the Liberals, Liberals, we got the Conservatives, okay, we got the NDP, NDP, we got the Party Copacabana, okay, that's mainly in Montreal, in Quebec, right? We got the Greens, and we got the People's Party. Okay, let me make enough room for this, right? So we got the Liberals, Lib, we got the Conservatives, we got the NDP, NDP, we got the Party Copacabana, I forget what it is, it's not Party Copacabana, it's anyway, the party is in Quebec, right? We got the Greens, and we got the People's Party, People's PCP, People's, we're going to call them People's Party, I think it's People's, I'm just going to say PP, okay, People's Party. So we got one, two, three, four, five, six different parties. The Liberals want a minority, okay, I'm going by memory, okay, so these guys are empowered, this is sort of an order of descent, I believe, right? So these guys are number one, they ended up getting like 30% of the votes, okay, 30% of the votes, okay, in Canada population is around 40 million, 40 million, 40 million, okay, it's a little bit less than that, 38 million or something, but let's say 40 million. The Conservatives got like 34% of what I believe, 34%. And the reason these guys have power is because of certain things that have been put into place in Western democracy in the United States, where you protect citizens of a nation from rule of the majority, right? So for example, rule the majority is this, let's assume 51% in a country vote for a certain party, and 49% vote for the other party. Well, true democracy, the 51% get to rule, right? There's laws in place in Canada United States that says, you know what, you can't just have 51% of a nation deciding everything for the 14, for 100% of the population. It doesn't work, by the way, that's the idea, right? Population, because they could come out the 51% could say, oh yeah, that 49% is an enemy to our country, we have to kill them all. That's the majority, the majority votes. I think George Carlin explained it best, I think it was George Carlin saying that democracies like this, it's like 10 people being in a room, and nine people vote to sodomize you, and one person votes not to sodomize you, you being the one voting for people not to sodomize you, 90% voted to sodomize you, so they take care of business, majority voted for democracy, right? You have to have protections to protect people, the minority from the majority, right? That's a no-brainer, okay? Now, NDP, I forget how many seats they got, how many seats did they get, I know they got around 3 million votes, okay? So we're gonna, this is percentage, we'll look this up as well, so NDP got 3 million votes, million votes, and they ended up having how many seats, I forget how many seats, we're gonna look this up actually, that way I'm not going by memory, this is numbers, I can't remember all the numbers, right? But I know this, NDP got around 3 million votes, the People's Party got around 800,000 votes, 800k, okay? The People's Party got no seats in governments, the NDP is supporting the Liberals, and the NDP with the Liberals with the number of percent of the votes, and the number of seats, we're gonna look this up, and you tell me if the mathematics make sense to you, right? They end up governing Canada, right? We'll do the math, let me look it up, let me look it up, apologies, I wasn't planning to go in this direction, but since we are, might as well get you the data, I wish I realized Canadian election results, here we go, so the Liberals got 33% of the vote, 33% of the vote, the Conservatives got 34%, a bloc couloir, bloc couloir got, we're in the south, are they in order? Yeah, yeah, this is gonna be in order, cool, the NDP got 16% of the vote, okay, the, the green, that should be the green, greens got 6.5% of the vote, 6.5%, the bloc couloir got 7.6% of the vote, okay, and the People's Party got 1.6% of the vote, the number of seats is like this, seats 1, these guys, the Liberals won 160 seats, the Conservatives won 119 seats, the NDP won 25 seats, the, the greens won 3 seats, the bloc couloir won 32 seats, and the People's Party won 0 seats, the number of people that voted the popular vote, check this out, check this out, the popular vote was this, 5.5 million, oops, 5.5 million, okay, we'll do it with decimals that way, it's clear, okay, 5.5 million voted for Liberals, 5.7 million voted for Conservative, 3 million voted for NDP, 1.3 million voted for bloc couloir, 400,000, 0.4 voted for the greens, and 0.84, okay, voted, and I'm rounding this one up, okay, and I'm rounding this one, this is legit, right, so look at these numbers, you tell me where there might be issues here, where there might be issues here, let me scroll down, okay, I'm skipping a whole bunch of chat because I want to get caught up with the data that I'm putting up here, greetings, Nagushka greetings, Voidhuk, how are you doing? George Carlin was a gifting man of the SQL, indeed, politics of man, the results, practically, thank you very much, plutonic florist, maybe the autism will have to play a large part in the new, indeed, indeed, makes zero, makes zero sense, learn SQL, indeed, right, so take a look at this thing, if we do a little bit of mathematics, right here, just the simplest dinghy's calculator, that's all you need, like a little dinghy calculator like this, you'll get, you'll understand the ridiculousness of this thing, right, you'll understand the ridiculousness of this thing, now the way it works is, these guys, these clowns here, these guys are clowns, together with these clowns, actually almost everybody's a clown, but these two clowns, and I should have reordered this, together with, they've teamed up and they're doing whatever it is they're doing, right, they're doing whatever it is they're doing, okay, these c's are not given by votes and I know of much dependence on them, yeah, not by it, how are you doing, c's can be distributed, district wise, for example, but the percentage in relation to the absolute numbers of votes, indeed, indeed, SQL, in Belgium currently, the three smallest parties are running the country, while the two biggest ones, not the people who want, are locked in opposition, right, so over here, if you want to find out how this works, right, and how this works, check this out, check this out, so NDP, NDP versus people's party, people's party, PC, I think it's PCP, people's, let me, let me get the right thing for it, where is it, let's see if they give the right thing for it, PPC, yeah it is, oh no that's PPC, oh I don't know what the PPC, PPC, people's party of Canada, PPC, let's call it PPC, officially PPC, PPC, blue, PPC, right, versus PPC, right, if you do this, all you gotta do is just take this and divide it by this, if you want to look at the numbers that way, the percentage that way, oh let me bring up the chat as well, we went behind, right, so if you want to look at it this way, you could go, okay, two ways to look at it really, you could go three divided by 0.84, that'll give you how many more, how many times more, how many times more people voted for NDP than PPC, so you just go three, is it gonna work, oh yeah there it is, three, I haven't used this for ever, it's not even, it's not even working, it's only a little thing, three divided by 0.84, that's how the numbers are going, I don't use the calculator very often and all I have to do is usually computer, so let's use the computer calculator, I should have brought myself for this, so check this out, three divided by three, three divided by 0.84, so they got 3.6 times, 3.6 times, so NDP got 3.6 times more votes than PPC, they ended up getting 25 seats, PPC ends up getting zero, right, or you can look at it this way, 0.84, right, you could do, should we do it that way, let's see, 0.84 divided by, divided by three, 0.84, sure let's do it this way, divided by three, and this gives you 28%, right, so 28%, PPC got 20% of the votes at the NDP, they get zero and these guys get 25, it gets worse if you do compared to Bloch-Cobecois, right, Bloch-Cobecois versus PPC, right, you do it this way, it's 1.3 over 0.84, we'll just do it this way, it's simple enough, right, so 1.3, 1.3 divided by 0.84, so this ends up being 1.5 times, 1.5 times, so Bloch-Cobecois got 1.5 times the votes of the PPC, but they got 32 seats and these guys got zero, right, and these guys are the true opposition in Canada by the way, true opposition, these guys are the ones that are challenging mandates and all this jazz, right, really true opposition is these guys, there is no opposition here really, this one's slowly coming about, but in the last three years everything that these clowns and these clowns with collaboration with these two clowns, right, liberals with these two clowns, we're pushing these guys, we're pretty much supporting as well as these guys, right, so the only true opposition really in Canada, the only true opposition in Canada is these guys right now, okay, is these guys and they have been the opposition since day one, okay, they met with the truckers, they opposed mandates, they did a lot of things, right, what's the solution to this, what's the solution to this, okay, what's the solution to this, now there's a precedent set throughout history where people of a certain mindset when they find out they're being discriminated against they talk to each other and decide to start moving into regions and populating those regions so they can control the government, the local government and then they slowly expand from there, right, so one of the solutions here is people who voted for the PPC, if they all get together and decide to move to a certain province that has a certain number of seats mandated to in the federal government and they all vote the same, right, and then they're going to have representation in government, right, they'll have power, right, right now they're divided, so one of the places that we know this took place in recent history was I believe with the Mormons where they were being persecuted so the leadership there said you know what, let's pack it all up, we're all going to Ohio, they go to Idaho, I think they went to Idaho, right, is that where the Mormons are set up, but I'm not pushing their philosophy by the way, I'm just, I'm not pushing anything, I can honestly tell you right now as a disclaimer I voted for these guys, right, I'm one of these guys, right, so in the last election I voted for these guys, right, because they're true opposition to draconian mandates, draconian measures, right, but I'm not telling you which way to vote for because majority of Canadians voted the other way, right, Utah, Utah, thank you very much, Idaho, what am I thinking, oh I know, so they moved to Utah, right, they moved to Utah, Latter-day Mormon saints with the metal tablets and John Brown or something like this, I don't know what the plus is, right, they packed up and they all went to Utah and in the last few, in the last few decades they slowly built power where they control Utah, they have a huge say in policy, they have multi-billion dollar, they control multi-billion dollar corporations, okay, and they're protecting their community, okay, so that's one of the solutions to people that do not have a voice, right, and this has occurred in different places as well, sometimes the centralized governments come in and crush them, right, it is what they do, it is what they do, thank you very much to Bushka as well, the FAR, FAR, FARM New York City pharmacy, is that the pharmacy, first time, I'm salutations, first time chat, thank you for popping in to our live stream, Plutonic Post, Joseph Smith, Joseph Smith Jr. was an American religious leader and the founder of Mormonism and the Latter-day Saint Movement, at the age of 24 Smith published the book of Mormon and by the time of his death 14 years later he had attracted tens of thousands of followers, yeah, from tens of thousands of followers to controlling the state and building multi-billion dollar corporations, Ronnie, how are you doing, welcome, welcome back, I was just catching up with chat, right, interesting, Canadian politics and this occurs in a lot of western societies with the elections and stuff like this, but there are rules in place to protect the minority from the majority, right, really there are rules in place, right, it's called, I forget what it's called, I put a video out in 2016 because people were asking me about or 2017 or something like that, people were asking me about the elections in the United States, how the results were for the 2016 election and I put out a video saying that people were saying oh it should all just be and I don't agree with it all being just the number of votes that people get should represent in fame because again centers of power will have a higher population and if we just go with center of power then they will be able to control everyone and that doesn't work, that doesn't work at all, right, just take it on a global scale, right, so for example right now China has one point let's say five billion people, India going, getting close to 1.5 billion people, there's like eight billion people in the world, right, so three billion people live in China, China plus India control three billion people, three billion, right, total population in the world eight billion, total eight billion, right, that's what is that three divided by eight, what percent three divided by eight, three divided by eight, that's 37.5 percent in the world, right, 37.5 percent in the world, if, if, if, let's assume we had a crafter, how are you doing, I heard China actually actually has only 1.3 billion like they over counted their population or something, possibly, I would say my guess would be that they may be under counting, right, so we'll round it up to one and a half because I can almost guarantee you India is under counting, right, like no way down the statistics to India to count them, right, most likely anyway, but let's assume together they control three billion people, that's 37.5 percent of the global population, according to Canadian type of results that you see here, 37 if in Canada if a party gets 37.5 percent of the vote usually they'll have a majority, that means they can do anything they want, so if we just go by one vote, one person, one vote and whoever gets control gets to do anything they want to anyone they want, right, if there's no protections put in place for that government, right, then China and India, if there was a world government, they would get to decide what everyone does in the world, that's tyranny of the majority, right, there's laws in place, I know in the United States, in Canada it's not looking very good, they took the charter rights and flushed it down the toilet, right, these guys, these clowns, these clowns, and these clowns was collaboration of those clowns and with the silence of these clowns, they took the Canadian charter rights and flushed it down the toilet, right, these guys were the only people that were opposing it and they had no seats in government, right, they're just a political party and they were giving interviews and they were being blacklisted and labeled as everything under the sun to silence them, okay, so keep this in mind, this is mathematics in politics, extremely important, extremely important and this is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to, once you understand mathematics, you're able to look at the numbers and come up with your own conclusions and try to think about different types of systems if they make sense or if they don't make sense, right, and why certain things work a certain way, right, why, you know, why are there rules in place, I know in the United States, to protect the minority from the majority, then why there was rules in place to a certain degree in Canada as well, but these clowns with the silence, these clowns flushed that down the toilet, right, they said no protection of the minority from the majority, they even flushed down the Nuremberg Code, right, they said no Nuremberg Code, look into Nuremberg Code and you'll understand what just happened in Canada since we're talking about Canada, okay, I'll end my political slant on this for now and I don't go this political slant with individual students personally, I would just give them, because my students know mathematics, the ones I work with anyway, if I was going to give them this data, I would just give them this data and ask them why they would think that this is legitimate or not legitimate and then I would explain the rule of the majority aspect of things, fun, love math just gives you a certain perspective that you will not get if you didn't know any of this and just looked at names and went oh okay, right, you look at the numbers, you look at the mathematics, you look at the data, you go wait a second, Crafter, they apparently over count because of the way they get funding, is that what it is, more babies equals more money for local government, so it's in the interest to count more, possibly, but for the first time in decades upon decades, last numbers that came out of China, they showed the population decrease, so if they're over counting, China just released their last numbers that they released for the quarter, I believe it was four quarter, might have been a year late, they had a population decrease in China, right, so there must be some kind of legitimate counting going on because otherwise they would just see a continuous count up, they actually released numbers saying that the population is decreasing in China, I think it dropped by 85,000 or something, and either in the last quarter or last year, I was assuming, maybe it was in last census, in Canada we do the census every four years, I don't know what it is in China, I don't know what it is in China, at least numbers are cool indeed, Ronnie, I like math because it's objective with zero emotions of bias, indeed, indeed, it's brilliant, it's brilliant, crafter, yeah, there's some profs that believe it's been decreasing since five years ago, yeah, yeah, which is why China took away their one child, one policy, their one child policy thing, right, see death, how are you doing, see death 420, subscribe, how many months, how many months see death, how are you doing, and welcome back to our live stream, subscribe, prime, subscribe, salut salut, welcome back brother, hope you're doing well, hope you're doing well, hope you're doing well, I fixed this twitch thing, as soon as it gives me some kind of bad, me up on that thing, I gotta fix this thing, how do you fix this thing, I'm just gonna deny it and maybe it won't, it keeps on repeating the same message, yeah, they set the policy for obvious reasons, right, statistics for example, but the math itself is an object for itself, yeah, here's the thing with mathematics, a lot of people think like the same came out, trust the science, trust and science, they shouldn't be used in the same word, unless you put, you cannot necessarily trust the science, because the science is based on doing the method, it's based on assumptions and all this jazz, that also applies to statistics, because the numbers are the numbers, the data is the data, depending on how you calculate it, so how you acquire the data is extremely important, a lot of people, a lot of surveys, analysis and stuff, the questions are loaded, the data is flawed and stuff like this, so data integrity is ridiculously important in science, and anything you do, the other thing is who does the interpretation, I put out a article back in 2005 called Anomalies, Prisons and Geophysics, How Governments Use Data, and How to Stop Them, and I had a paragraph specifically in there talking about the most important thing about data is first of all, you need good data integrity, i.e., who's collecting data, and the other thing you need is who's interpreting data, because whoever's interpreting data, they can represent the data in any which way they want, they can manipulate the data, and why not, it's like a science matter, I love it, why did you frame those comics behind you, because I liked them, this is underdog, it's the first appearance of underdog, and this one, I believe the center fold is missing, so it's not complete, so it's the first appearance of underdog, missing the center fold, but it's the first appearance of underdog, and I love the cover, and this is Paul Terry's Mighty Mouse, and he was like, what's his name, oh I forgot his name, the guy who was famous for doing Donald Duck, Carl Barks, doing Donald Duck, Paul Terry or Jerry, Mighty Mouse, it's a great cover as well, it's a great cover as well, gang I'm just gonna step away for one second, because I hear KittyCast doing something, I just want to make sure they're not destroying something, okay I'll be right back, I'll be right back, and KittyCast, hilarious, see that I remember underdog as a kid, yeah yeah yeah yeah, fantastic, I loved it, I loved it, speed of lightning roar thunder on the knock, Larkbarks, Carl Barks almost sounds like, what does it sound like, where'd it go, oh I lost it, chat is wack, Twitter charts sounds like, Carl Marx it does, it does, KittyC, KittyDestroy, actually our housemates downstairs and the complex downstairs, they just got a new kitten, like two days ago, I want to go pay him a visit, like a little kitten, so I want to go see the little kitten, Barksus then a Marxus, ha ha, so Barksus indeed, don't be a Marxus, what does the cat say, meow, sal, the slayer, hilarious, Porquois how are you doing, hope you're doing well, Chicho is herding, what am I doing, Chicho's herding cats on, offline, yeah yeah, crazy, crazy, for what, Canadian elections, last elections, last elections, these were the stats for it, that's what we're talking about, just in case you missed it, so NDP got 3.6 times more votes than the People's Party of Canada, they got 25 seats, People's Party of Canada 0 seats, Block Cobaqua got 1.3 million votes, 1.5 times the number of votes of the People's Party of Canada, they got 32 seats, People's Party of Canada 0 seats, Canadian democracy at work, Canadian politics is mind-boggling insane, you could make a career of trash talking Canadian politics, really, let's see that, we gotta, yeah, we gotta, a lot of people need to do a lot of things, I'm gonna take this down gang, let's see what else comes up, let's see what else comes up, enough politics and mathematics, let's see if there's anything else coming up, I like this thing, it's cleaning it up, wow, when it got confronted, yeah, these clowns are clowns, clowns are clowns, clowns are clowns, I'm gonna have some more pomegranates and apples, and this is an open discussion, so we can talk about whatever, pomegranates and apples with a little bit of mint sprinkled on, so addictive, so addictive, see that says, I haven't tried, I haven't tried the chicho food yet, it's on my counter, just waiting, but I'm saving it, awesome, which one, what did you get, you got the applesauce or the blackberry sauce, I mean jam, applesauce or blackberry jam, or the quince, made some quince jam too, delicious, delicious, don't hold on to it too long, okay, it's gotta be eating at some point, I got three jars, but only one has a label, oh, I have no idea what they are, you don't know what they are, I can't read the label, I'm just surprised, alert, if one of them is clear, it'd be like honey, if it's black, it'd be blackberry jam, and if it's like, not clear, translucent, this honey, right, golden, another one, if it's like cream color, it's gonna be the applesauce, or red color, it could be the applesauce as well, you have jam, okay, good, good, good, just treat those sounds like a spoiled brat, can't stand these boys anymore, yeah, I don't listen to anything these, they're putting out, I can't, I can't do it either, I'm plutonic, I want a 10 containers room, hilarious, funny, funny, funny, funny, I'll be sitting at work, and things start bending, and you see everything for what it is, the veil will be lifted, and you will run for your life, depending on where you work, or you will cower away in a corner, calling for mama, hilarious, and funny, funny, funny, mathematics is crazy, I can honestly tell you, in Canada, complete class collapse of education, it's a complete collapse of education, it is, they are not preparing children in Canada, to be self-sufficient, free-thinking individuals, it's, they're not, it's very dangerous, very dangerous times, very dangerous times, fear is the mind-killer, all of God says, and that's from the book Dune, where's my Dune, that's not Dune, that's God Empire, where's my Dune, I have Dune here, if you haven't read the book Dune by Frank Herbert, read Dune by Frank Herbert, extremely important, extremely important, let's do some trigonometry, we should do some trigonometry, let's do some trigonometry, see that can't be worse than here, there are 26 schools here in one district where nobody passed, at least they're failing students, at least you know who's not passing, who's not failing, in Canada, I don't think there are a lot of fail anyone anymore, like they can't even fail them, trigonometry, let's do trigonometry, it's okay if they're failing people, at least they're given a grade that says fail, here they don't, I don't know of any, Ronnie, the education system, all over the world is declining it seems, we have young kids now who are aspiring to become only fast models, well I don't, I don't think everywhere in the world Ronnie, I think in the western world yes, but I think in other parts of the world education is producing a lot of technical people, Ronnie says the number of kids that want to become doctors, scientists, mathematicians are declining, possibly, and Proquas says in Quebec now kids pass because of age, mind you, Canada elected a PM because of his hair, yeah basically, yeah in Canada I don't think there are a lot of fail anyone, and education is based on provincial and I don't think they fail any kids in BC, they don't do it, I see that I had a great idea to fix college fees in schools, we just mail free degrees to everyone, fill in the blank of what you want, I want to be, be doctor Laura, so here's one way to fix it, guarantee a job, right, if a school is going to give someone a degree, you know, charge on $100,000 to educate them on a degree, they must guarantee that that person can work in this job within five years time, otherwise the payments, they don't have to make any payments for their student loans, and student loans should never be guaranteed, the only, if a university is going to charge $100,000 you know, charge for any type of educational care, what it is, right, they should take on the risk as well as the students that sign up for that thing, right, but loaner beware, right, loaner should take all the risk for giving out loans, they should have done due diligence to see if it's a legitimate place to loan money, yeah like like Samsung being known in school all year, not fine, I got have two calculus that I found and those numbers on my heroes, it may be conspiracy theory, but I think they're special in some way, some way of my reference frame at least, just to mention, never mind that, I become computer scientist for money, not because I want to, crafter says, does anyone go to college to actually be educated, I did, I went to university to get a degree in geophysics and mathematics, let's be honest, the only reason anyone goes is the promise of you won't have to work hard for your money, that wasn't my case, I knew I was gonna have to work hard for my money and I picked a discipline that required you to work hard, geophysics was not an easy, it's not a not physically, not mentally career to go into, and I worked my ass off to get a math degree, to get my math minor, so I had and I know students that don't go to university, just to be at university and for cultural, social aspect of things, they go there to get a degree, yeah some, some, gang let's do a little bit of trigonometry, okay, let's do some trigonometry, okay, now trigonometry at the beginning stages of university, at high school basically, so check this out, in grade eight, nine, even in grade 10, they tell you trigonometry is this, trig, and it is, so grade eight, nine, and not, great, great, we'll talk about high school, grade eight, nine, and ten, so grade eight, nine, and ten, grades, right, they say trig is about right angle triangles, in Canada anyway, they tell you trig is about right angle triangles, in grade 11 and 12, 11, 12, you realize trig is really about circles, that's one of the important things you have to really appreciate, especially when you're getting into grade 11 and grade 12, because when we're trying to study circles, right, let's assume you're trying to study circles, and we've talked about this, why would you want to try to study a circle, right, you would try to study a circle because a circle represents the ideal cyclic function, because let's assume you stand here, you're here, and you're moving around, if you're here, you're moving around, then you've gone one cycle, right, and the reason we want to study cyclic functions is because cycles are everywhere in our world, everywhere in our world, not just the earth revolving around the sun rotating on its axes, the moon going around having some kind of orbit, the tides of the ocean going up and down, right, it's not just the physical part of the cyclic nature of life, it's also embedded within biology, our systems, our matter that we occupy, okay, it's also embedded within economics, huge, huge, you can actually invest money in cyclic companies, right, invest when the cycle is down, cycle goes up, you sell it, you buy, and there's trillions of dollars, really trillions of dollars being traded on this cycle, we talked about this, right, we did a whole thing based on personal finance, right, investing in personal finance, we have a playlist on censor too, that talks about the cyclic nature, and these cycles can vary depending on if you want to look at it on the micro scale or the macro scale, right, are you just looking at it as a, if you're a trader as a day trader, or you're investing for your retirement on a long scale, right, are you looking at it based on millisecond trading, which is there's a lot of programs out there, most stocks on the market are traded based on our automatic, this machine is doing it, right, minute, 10 minute, day, week, month, year, decade, is that what you're investing in, what cycle, what speed are you investing, right, is it going to take you, you know, one second to make this cycle, or is it going to take you one day to complete the cycle, is it going to take you one week, one month, one year, one decade, right, doesn't make a difference in regards to analyzing the circle, because if you're studying a cyclic nature, it applies to all of these, right, you don't care about the length, the time it takes to complete a cycle, you just want to know how to analyze the cycle, right, apologies if I'm not reading the chat game, because I want to get this train of thought out of the way, right, so one of the reasons we study circles is because they are the ideal cyclic function, because if a cycle fits this model, right, or if we can create a base model, right, mathematical model, right, that we can analyze based on the ideal cyclic function, we can take that and apply it to multiple systems within our society, may it be based on economics, politics, biology, right, nature, doesn't matter, right, that's the reason we study circles, right, so what is the one thing you do when you study cyclic functions, okay, what is the thing you do to use study cyclic functions, you take the ideal cyclic function, let's erase those, you take the ideal cyclic function, let's create another circle, right, you take the ideal cyclic function, which is a circle, you find its center, right, and you put it on a grid, you break it down, that way you can put numbers on your circle, right, so we put on a Cartesian coordinate system, that's what this is called, Cartesian coordinate system, X and Y axes, and we say okay, if we're standing here, right, and if we're going to go around the circle, how do we analyze that, the way you analyze this, the way you analyze this is, let's say you want to move here, you can say, okay, go up a certain angle, a certain distance along the arc length of the angle, right, or you could also do this, because you put on the Cartesian coordinate system, you could say create your right angle triangle, and that links these guys up, right, that's how the triangle, right angle triangle is connected to a circle, you create a right angle triangle, and this becomes your X, and this becomes your Y, so the coordinate here is now X and Y, right, so on a circle, right, if you want to know where to go if you're standing here, right, I could tell you to go a certain angle on the circle at a certain radius from a certain center point, and you end up there, or I could give you the coordinates of the circle of where you want to end up, right, easy, right, one of the things we do in mathematics or mathematicians do, right, they will try to simplify calculations as much as possible, and the easiest number to deal with is the number one, right, so one thing they do, they take a circle, they're trying to analyze this, trying to simplify things, right, you call this a unit circle, unit circle, and what is a unit circle? It's a circle where the radius is equal to one, right, so we're going to take this and say the radius r is equal to one, when you're talking about a circle that has a radius of one, you call the unit circle, that's it, simple calculation. Now, we want to analyze this, we want to figure out what happens when you have to deal with a cyclic function with something that repeats, right, well, you could do this, you could say, you know what, because this is based on a Cartesian coordinate system, right, we're going to have a couple things that happen, one of them is our x value here is going to change as we move along the circle, right, because this x is basically going to move this way or this way, depending on where you are here, right, as you move along, this x is going to move along, right, and if the radius of this thing is one, then based on a Cartesian coordinate system, the point here, if the radius is one, you bring this thing down, well, the x point is one, that's a given, right, because we're dealing with a unit circle and it's got a radius of one, so this length here is going to be one, and the y, the y value here is zero, so you can say, okay, you know what, I want to find out what happens, right, what happens to my x value and my y value as I move around the circle, right, as I move around the circle, I want to know what happens, so for example, let's take a look at this, what's our x value here and why y value there, do you guys know, and then try to figure out, tell me what the x value is here and what the y value will be here and what the x value will be here and what the y value will be here, what do you guys think, what is it going to be, right, because once you see it, you cannot unsee it, right, once you see this, you cannot unsee, what's going to happen if the radius of this thing is one, as you move this way, right, it's the radius exactly running, right, so you move along here, well, the x value from here, it's starting at one and it's getting smaller, smaller, smaller, smaller, here it's zero, so the x value becomes zero, the y value started off here at zero and worked this way up, right, and if the radius is one, that's one, negative one and zero, because you're coming this way, the x value of zero here, it's going in a negative direction, so this becomes negative one and zero, right, and as you move down, right, the y value went from one, reached zero and it goes to negative one, so this becomes zero and negative one, so what you can do is say, okay, cool, we've got some base coordinates for this unit circle for the x and y value, right, so let's take this information and create another graph, okay, and we're going to do this, yeah, we'll do this here, not straight there, let's make it straight, so first of all, yeah, let's make two, how many degrees is it all the way around the circle, okay, the whole imagery number derivation also comes from this, imagine, oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, so take a look at this, right, 360 degrees, right, so if you move all the way around the circle, if you turn around, we just did a 360, all the way around 360, we know it's 360 all the way around, German minister doesn't, German minister thought the 360 went at 180, that's the level of intelligence, right, we're the smart ones, Plutonic Pluris, Xbox 360 baby, Ronnie says, one dompupo, Plutonic Pluris says, right, so a full circle, a full cycle, right, and that's what we're going to call it, one cycle takes 360 degrees, right, so we want to take a look at one cycle, because as soon as we can figure out what happens in one cycle, we know what happens in every cycle, because it repeats, brilliant, brilliant, right, we figure that out, we figure it out for a thousand cycles, infinite cycles, we can figure it out for the backwards, going around, right, so let's look at one cycle, one cycle is 360 degrees, right, so on the x-axis we're going to put theta, degrees, okay, so let's put the numbers on there for now, we go from zero to 360 degrees, zero to 360 degrees, and the reason I'm making two graphs is because we're going to do two graphs, right, we're going to graph the movement of the x coordinate, what the x does, and what the y does, right, because as you're moving along, when you move here, your y value is here, when you go there your y value is that, right, so that's what we're going to look at, let's put the y value in the top and the x value in the bottom graph, so we're going to call this y and we're going to call this x, one thing you want to do, you want to find out the range, okay, per qual, what, trigonometry can be interesting, whoa, mind blown, we're talking about so the sinus or cosine wave is just shifted some, it's just shifted, indeed, we'll talk about it, take a look, so let's put the y up top, x in the bottom graph, okay, and let's talk about the range that we're going to do, right, because what we did right now, we said we defined the parameters, right, like if you're playing a game like a soccer football game, basketball game, but you draw the map, right, okay, Robert Anton Wilson or was it Timothy Leary, they called it the mind map or something like this, the map of the, oh, I forget the terminology for what do you call it, Robert Anton, mapping the something, right, so for the degrees we went from zero to 360 because after 360 repeats, right, okay, what's the range that the y can go, well if we start here the y can be zero, right, it goes all the way up here and the y reaches a maximum of one, right, and then it starts coming down again, right, reaches zero again, goes down again all the way to negative one and then goes up again to zero, so the limit, the boundary that our y value can exist in is between one and negative one, so let's put our limits on that, one and negative one, it can go from start from zero, go all the way to one, come back down to negative one, go up to zero, right, well where does it do this, where does it do this, well it does it, the maximum points, right, occurs here and that's 90 degrees, right, if you go from there to there, that's 90 degrees, the minimum point occurs at 270 degrees, but one thing you should have noticed that we're talking about a circle, right, that's the beauty of it, right, once you apply it on a grid and take a look at it, break it down, right, when you're a kid, when you take things apart you can understand what they are, right, or try to understand what they are, what their components are and then maybe you could create something new or put it back together again, maybe you could put it back together better, right, so when we're taking a look at a circle, right, going around and around and around, before we put a grid on it, it was a whole circle we were looking at and it could have varied from one location to another, but as soon as we put a grid on it, we realized that hey, take a look at this thing, in this quadrant, this quadrant, right, when we break it into a quarter, this thing is also sort of mirrored here and then it's a mirrored here and it's a mirrored there, so logic says if we can understand what's happening in this quadrant, we can understand what's happening here, here and here, cool, so these four quadrants really make up a full circle when we can understand the first quadrant, we can pretty much understand the second quadrant, the third quadrant, the fourth quadrant, right, our critical points really to divide these quadrants are the following, this point, this point, this point and this point, so on the theta axis here, on the theta axis here, let's put the degrees on here because we went from zero to 360 degrees, we went all the way around, so let's break this into the quadrants that we're interested in, so this quadrant here, this point here is at 90 degrees, you come this way, that's at 180 degrees, you come all the way here, that's 270 degrees, and then if you go all the way, that's 360 degrees, right, so let's break it down into the four quadrants that we have, so if you want to break zero to 360 down to four quadrants, I put out a video on this, how to break a line into pieces, a long time ago, like 10 years ago, I put out this video, how to break a line into pieces, because we want to break it into four pieces, is even, cut it in half, so we're going to cut this in half, and then we're going to have two quadrants here and two quadrants here, and two is even, so break it in half again, break it in half again, and then what we got, this becomes 90, 180, 270, and then 360, zero degrees, 90 degrees, 180 degrees, 270 degrees, 360 degrees, right, okay, cool, we're going to do the same here, let's line them up, 90, 180, 270, right, okay, cool, now we're ready to put our points on here, because we have our, this is called the domain for the x-axis, but anyway we have our boundary for the x, we got our boundary for the y, and we got the quadrants marked off, right, and the x also does the same, goes from one to negative one, right, goes all the way to one, and then comes back to negative one, one, negative one, one, negative one, right, so let's do this, we're going to break the x as well from one all the way to negative one, okay, now let's figure out, man this is relaxing, awesome, relaxing math is the best math, all right, so what we want to do is figure out what's going on in these quadrants, where we are on here, right, here for the y we're at zero, when we're at zero degrees the y is zero, so we're here, actually let's do this in different color, let's do this in green, we like green, let's do green, who knew learning math was so relaxing, no wonder all the students fall asleep in math, I hope you're not finding this boring though, this is relaxing but not boring I hope, right, unfortunately sometimes you don't get that aspect of it when you're sitting in a classroom, air conditioning going, buzzing, 30 people, some don't care, right, some of the people sometimes that don't care are the instructors and usually the curriculum is set up not to be exciting, Ronnie I love math, me too, so when we're standing here, right, our y value is zero, cool, we're gonna put it there, let's look at the nodes here, when we're standing here our y value is one, so at 90 degrees we're at one, let's go to this node, at this point our y value is zero and we're at 180 degrees, right, so at 180 degrees we're back down to zero, over here we're at 270 degrees and our y value is negative one and if we go back to zero again our y value is zero and we're at 360 degrees, right, so we're back here, now take a look at this thing, you might look at this and go oh so the graph must look like this lines going straight but it doesn't, one of the reasons it doesn't is because this is curved, right, so the way we connect these dots is not just lines going like this, it's curved, now if you love music that should be, you should know what that is and that's sound wave really, if you like going to the ocean swimming, you should be familiar with this, that's waves in the ocean, if you're trading stocks you should be familiar with this type of motion, that's trading eyes and lows, right, if you understand what light is, you'll know that light is a wave, particle wave, right, oh my god, we do this math in my wing trunk training, really, very cool, very cool, green for hope, awesome, for qua, not green for a stupid climate but no, can't wait to see chucho draw the perfect wave, awesome, we make chucho waves, nice, nice, nice, sweet, sweet, sir wise brought salutations, right, so this, this, this wave has a name, okay, we call it a sine wave, let's do it for the x as well, right, where we are on the x-axis as we move around the circle what our x position is and then it's hard to do it with two things, how do we do this, we go as we're moving around, oh you can't even see my other pen, as we're moving around, oh my god, so difficult to do, it's like an amusement park thing when you're doing your thing, right, the x-axis looks like this, when we're at zero degrees we're at one, when we're at 90 degrees we're at zero, when we're at 180 degrees the x is negative one, when we're at 270 degrees the x is zero again and we're at 360 degrees we're at one again, so this wave for the x-axis looks like this, now remember this thing keeps on going around and around and around so this doesn't end here, this continues like this and does this, it's basically picking up from here and going like this, so this part goes like this, over here it's picking up just like this and going like this again, right, so it continues, same with this, right, and it comes down, this one is called a cosine wave, cosine wave, sine wave, now how is this related to triangles, well it kicks into so kotoa, sine, cosine and tangent and stuff, so if you study triangles, right, in grade eight, nine and ten, you learn about opposite hypotenuse and adjacent, right, so if you have, let's do this in red, if you have a triangle and here's your angle, you call this side the opposite, you call this side the adjacent to theta and you call this side the hypotenuse, okay, loony woo, thank you very much for the follow, right, so you learn, you learn that sine theta, sine of this angle is the opposite side divided by the hypotenuse, opposite divided by hypotenuse, okay, now keep this in mind, this is, this is a ratio, right, so what it's saying is this, it's saying this side divided by this side is sine theta, right, so sine of this angle is defined as the ratio of the opposite side divided by the hypotenuse, okay, why is this important because no matter how big your triangle is or how small your triangle is, so let's draw another right angle triangle, so we have two triangles here, right, we got this and we got the bigger triangle and this side is again the opposite side from this angle and this whole length again is the hypotenuse, goes all the way to there, right, and this one is the smaller one, so sine of this angle is still going to be the opposite side relative to the hypotenuse, so we don't even need to draw the hypotenuse twice because it's the same hypotenuse, so I'm going to erase this and just call this height and the hypotenuse depends on which triangle you're talking about, right, so sine of an angle is basically saying that hey, the ratio of the opposite side to the hypotenuse is going to be the same no matter how big or how small the triangle is, now we've got three triangles, that's the opposite, that's the hypotenuse, this ratio is going to be the same, so four given angle, four given angle, let's say let's say we have 30 degrees, right, let me write that bigger so you see it better, let's say you have 30 degrees, let's say you have 30 degrees, right, this side divided by this side would be the same as if you had a smaller triangle and this was 30 degrees, would be the same as this side divided by this side, okay, so if this was the same as this and this was A and this was B, right, and this was X and this was Y, the sine trigonometry tells us this that A over B, A over B would have to be equal to X over Y, oops, X over Y, not Y over X, X over Y, X over Y, right, Y is this important, wow this is, they're called similar triangles, this is those models when you're building models and stuff, if you're into collecting anything or if you're into engineering, you're interested in engineering or models or anything really, right, when you look at it when they say oh this model is you know 1 to 10 or 10 to 1, right, this is what they're talking about, so for example if this was you, right, this is called proportionality by the way, right, they call it similar triangles in trigonometry but you could also call it proportional, they're proportional, right, so if you have you here and there's a little mini you, right, and your height is let's say 6 feet and your arm is 2 feet, I don't know if that would be legit or not, 2 feet, 3 feet, 2 feet is pretty small, that's like t-rex level arms, isn't it, so let's say 3 feet, right, so let's say your arms are 3 feet and if you want to make a little mini version of you that is 2 feet tall, then you can figure out how big the arm needs to be, right, because all you do you say this divided by this has to equal that divided by that, so all you would do is say 6 divided by 3 is equal to 2 over X cross multiply, you get 6X is equal to 6 and divide by 6, so X is equal to 1, so you have to make this 1, your arm 1 feet, right, 10-minute warning, are we into 2 hours already, elder god, wow, time flies, what, yeah yeah we're gonna go over time a little bit, a little bit, sorry gang, right, and each of them put me in detention in different format, Ronnie says, he's a good package, thanks, he does, so I just want to make that clear that sometimes it's not clear when they teach soko-to, soko-to to you guys, initially when you're studying detention, detention for God's sake, when they teach you trigonometry in grade 8, 9 and 10, it's not clear that why is sine important, it's because the sine of an angle is the same value for any size triangle, wow, incredible, the ratio of one side divided by the other side for any given angle is the same, cool, this also applies to costata, which is adjacent over hypotenuse, adjacent over hypotenuse, and it also applies to tan theta, which is opposite over adjacent, opposite over adjacent, right, now take this information that you know, take this information that we just learned, that for a given angle the ratio of one side to another side is the same, right, take this triangle, apply it here to a unit circle, right, to a unit circle, and realize that a unit circle is a circle defined as having a radius one, right, and realize that, hey, wait a second, this thing tells us, it doesn't make a difference, how big the triangle is, you could have a bigger triangle, and if you drew a circle, you can't even do it, my triangle's so big, right, you could draw a circle, come all the way down, you could take a bigger circle, my circle golf, you could take a bigger circle, right, you could take a bigger circle, and this graph is going to look almost identical, the only thing that's going to change is the radius, this is just going to change, right, so if the radius of this is two, right, we take a unit circle, we multiply the radius by two, right, double the radius, all that's going to happen, this wave is going to look the same, it's going to have the same motion, the only thing that happens is it goes from two all the way down to negative two, so it just amplifies it, right, it just makes it look like that, wow, cool, now we can take circles, and if we're making music, you can take this music, right, you can take these waves and amplify them, make sound, cool, but wait a second, it's going to have the same pattern, all of this is going to amplify it, right, well we can take the same graph, right, and graph it based on how fast it goes around, right, if remember we talked about if it takes one second, one day, one week, one month, one year, one decade, if this zero to 360 instead of being an angle, if it was time, how long does it take for it to go around, right, what you can do is create waves that are not only amplified differently, bigger or smaller, but also change frequency, the period changes, this is called a period, how long it takes to do one cycle, right, so all the sun you could do, obviously it should be a better graph, maybe we could do it here, faster cycle, right, and what you can do with these things you can multiply them, you can add them, you can move them, you can translate them, right, you could do a lot of things, once you understand the base mathematics of trigonometry, these functions, these formulas, what you can do is you can take what color is going to stand up, you can take a general sine function, you can say it's a function, right, here let's do a little bit of erasing, we'll kill this, right, so our function up here is f of x is equal to sine theta, right, that's what it is, f of x being your y, right, what you can do is manipulate this thing, you could go f of x is equal to a number, so we know what this looks like, this guy looks like our green graph, right, well what if we want to graph the following function, negative 2 sine, I haven't talked about pi yet, sine 3 theta plus 4 minus actually plus 6, right, so let's say this is our function, we've taken our original function and we're going to do this to it, well what does that do, well the negative 2 flips the original function this way and it makes the radius 2, so it amplifies it by a factor of 2, this guy 3 here compresses the function to a third of its period, this guy here moves at four units back, right, this guy here moves at six units up, so we're taking our original function and manipulating it and this can be done with to model certain either physical or physical systems like a ferrous wheel, right, you can model a ferrous wheel based on a sine function, tides of the ocean you can model this way or you can use these types of things to model market reactions and stuff like this, that's sort of a good intro to the power of trigonometry and why it is, you study right angle triangles because you want to study circles, why do you want to study circles, because you want to know what cyclic functions, how cyclic functions behave, why do you want to study how cyclic functions behave, because cyclic functions are embedded in our societies, are embedded in our lives, are embedded in nature, they're part of life, right and once you can model life, man you can do a lot of things with it, right, you could do a lot of things with it, okay that's trigonometry and it just explodes from there, right and we have a playlist trigonometry playlist here i'll link it up for you guys on our censor tube channel, if you go to if you go to our censor tube playlist or censor tube channel and go to playlist i'm just gonna do this math, where's my trigonometry playlist, a trick, oh i should put math on there too so people can find it, silly me, math didn't bring it up, here's our trigonometry playlist, okay see that's excellent, i like how you describe the function here, yeah it's super cool, it's crazy cool and we we can get on it next time as well, just talk about it, yeah let me save this, we sort of did it, not a quick ending, sort of brought it all together again, sort of did a little summary, but that's a good little intro for it and we didn't go too much over time, that's good, that's good and we can definitely explore this more in the future and look at different functions and actually graph something like this right and do the translation, so maybe in the next math stream we'll pick up from here and just graph something like this based on what we created here, we'll create a table and i'll show you how it's done, super cool, super cool way of doing it and so easy, so easy, now Salga's she's your best, yeah envy him, envy him, they might be passed out now, they might be passed out, they were running around, playing around and stuff like this, um gang let's call this stream, let's call this stream, that was fun, that was definitely fun, yo fest thank you very much for the follow, salutations, salutations and welcome to our live stream channel and gang do not forget, do not forget, free assange, free assange, free assange, Julian Assange is a publisher and journalist that is being crucified for trying to bring transparency and accountability of capitals, power to humanity, something that we desperately need in our societies, right, for more information see wikileast.org, defend.wikileast.org or our Julian Assange on wikileast.com, censor tube, see that thank you for the compliment, see that, yay if you want to know what this work is about i am on patreon, patreon.com.com.com, you can follow the work there, we have a sub-stack page as well and a sub-strap star page, my pleasure burqa, my pleasure burqa, you can definitely follow the work there, for those of you that are supporting this work on patreon and on sub-stack for now, thank you very much for the support as well as the people that are supporting us on twitch, it is a large part because of the support that we're getting on these two platforms including the handful of people that are supporting us on censor tube, that we're able to do what it is that we are doing and thank you very much as well as the support we're getting from the mods both on twitch, on our video sharing platforms and on our little server that we built a little community that we're sharing information discussing things and talking about things and trying to figure things out including talking about mathematics and gang we do announce these live streams 30 minutes before we go live on twitter, mines, vk, gap, parlor and getter you can follow the work there and we do have a soundcloth page where we upload certain podcasts certain streams podcast on soundcloth and those podcasts are available should be available on your favorite podcasting platform thanks was fun yeah super fun i love explaining trade so much fun it takes a fair amount of concentration to be able to link everything up and sometimes and it's different every time almost different every time because sometimes i put in more things sometimes i put in things i shouldn't have put in because i was trying to go in this direction i go on the tension i go to come back track it's super fun it's super fun as a as an educator someone that teaches it has been doing it for 20 plus years i still love it because it keeps me sharp that's what mathematics does gang really you want to become smarter learn mathematics you want to become master of your own domain your own life learn mathematics it's my it's my important recommendation to everyone right you want to be a be a free thinking human being in control of your own destiny learn mathematics aside from that gang i hope you have a fantastic next couple days we're mapping global conflicts on tuesday starting at 1 p.m part 4 join us if you buy everyone