The birthday paradox demonstrates that in a group of just 23 people, there is approximately a 50% chance that at least two people share the same birthday, and this probability rises to 99% with 57 people. This mathematical principle explains why a poll worker's claim of multiple voters sharing the same birthday as evidence of election fraud is statistically unlikely and does not constitute fraud. The paradox works because it considers all possible pairs of people (253 pairs for 23 people), each with a 1/365 chance of matching, making the probability of no matches drop below 50%.
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She Blames January 6th for Her Debt (Yes, Really)本站添加:
This is Caleb Hammer. He's really big on YouTube at the moment and he had this mega woman on to talk about how she's in debt because she didn't attend the insurrection and now all of the insurrectionists are getting payouts from Trump. If only she had gone to the insurrection, she regrets it.
>> BLM >> All right, let's listen. It's insane. We just I just want to listen to at least the first part of it here.
>> I'm in debt because I didn't attend January 6th. Well, what the do you mean?
>> insurrection and my radicalization started during that.
>> What the You said you deserve the year off.
>> After grinding for four years, I deserve this.
>> A year to yourself? What entitlement is this? What [ __ ] entitlement? You You don't deserve anything.
>> Well, BLM I was going to donate to I'm thinking and then I educated myself.
>> Oh. How do you think George Floyd died?
>> [sighs] >> That's the wrong hero to have.
>> DOLLARWISE IS FINALLY HERE.
>> OKAY, no ads. Don't care about the ads.
Here we go.
Pam.
I was actually laughing reading the top of the document for this episode for the first time in this channel's history. I was in my office laughing.
>> Oh, no.
>> Because you telling Lindsey it it fits your aesthetic.
I'm in debt because I didn't attend January 6th.
>> [laughter] >> What the [ __ ] are we talking about? What the [ __ ] do you mean?
>> That's how kind of all this started brewing.
>> And I only wish that my friend Mike Pence had that additional courage.
>> January 6th.
>> So, my insurrection and my radicalization started during that.
>> Okay, make a note. She just called herself a radical, right? She's going to deny that later. I watched part of this.
>> time >> Okay. [laughter] And you're in debt because of that?
>> supposed to be there and I did not attend because I had previously agreed to go to Marco Island with some friends that I vacation with every year in January. We usually go to Puerto Rico, but we went to Marco Island.
>> You have FOMO of Jan 6?
>> Um, well, I was kind of following along cuz we had a rainy day on January 6 down in Florida.
>> That's why you were following along.
Come on, be honest with us. You know you were following along because you're a cult member. Everybody knows that.
>> And here's my friends all sending me videos of what's going on on January [laughter] 6. And I'm watching the news and it's all hell breaking loose. And here's my friends singing and everything's peaceful and sweet. And now I'm seeing like there's all kinds of violence going on. So now other people are messaging saying, "What's going on there?" So how is it that half the crowd didn't know that there was an insurrection happening?
>> I don't I wasn't there. I don't know. I I didn't I didn't participate myself.
Um, I'm >> kind of wild.
>> I don't know. It was a big political moment. I'm sure there were people there that had no idea what was going on. I'm sure if I was there I wouldn't be participating in any violent things and >> Exactly.
>> were some people that were.
>> That were.
>> As well, so >> Absolutely caught on video.
>> How the [ __ ] is you not going there leading to you being in debt? I'm so confused. That makes no sense. Make that make sense to me.
>> I know.
>> Okay, so you didn't throw a chair through a window. Now you're in debt.
>> No, absolutely not. But well, so that's like 20 2021 that happened, right? Cuz it was after the 2020 election.
>> Are you saying cuz Trump wasn't still in office you're missing your mortgage payment? He's in office now.
>> Oh, yeah. Yeah. But at at that point, now personally, I was a poll worker during the 2020 election as well in Tampa, Florida. And um, they were also saying there's no fraud in the elections, there's no fraud in the elections. I also witnessed that, Not kidding.
>> Okay.
>> [laughter] >> This is supposed to be a financial audit type of thing, like you're going through your finances, trying to understand what happened, and how you can fix it, and all of that [ __ ] And she is she just does not give a [ __ ] She's here to propagandize and nothing else.
>> And you miss you're missing a mortgage payment because of that? Like I'm [laughter] >> Well, so this started the whole like radicalization process where I'm just like >> Of who? Of you?
>> who? Of this? Yes.
>> Oh, tell me Okay, sure.
>> is cuckoo at this point. I'm seeing >> has probably always been cuckoo. Humans are Um I assume Okay, so you got radicalized. I don't really like radicals, I'll be honest.
>> I just figured that could have been easily been me. And actually, um >> What could have been? A voting illegally?
>> No, going into the capital during that time, not voting illegally, uh but watching illegal votes being made.
>> Okay, you saw illegal votes being made?
>> Yes. Times of >> volunteer at the poll work? Isn't that like kind of what you're supposed to be >> Right.
>> Like oh, sorry, you don't have the right ID or something?
>> Right, yeah. And >> So this is a MAGA nutcase. You know that she's lying here. You know she's lying, right?
By the way, I'd appreciate it if you guys follow me on Patreon. You don't have to donate, but if you could just follow me there, it would mean a lot to me. You know, with YouTube doing everything it does, and the government going down the tubes, and and everything else. Uh it would mean a lot if you supported my work, and that goes for other YouTubers as well.
>> Why'd you were Why were you letting it happen, then?
>> I wasn't. I was rejecting too many voters, so they took me off the poll pad, it's called.
>> Were you >> What a complete piece of [ __ ] Rejecting too many voters. Really? What is [ __ ] wrong with you? And the two examples she gives, or maybe one example that she gives, is complete nonsense. It's made up. It's not a problem. Listen to this.
>> Correctly rejecting voters?
>> Yes, they all had the same birthday.
Like a whole group of people come in and they all have a January 1st, same year.
>> Okay, so you're telling me that there was an orchestrated effort to send people in who were not really American citizens, who were what? I don't understand. Like what's the claim here?
And they were going to vote under fake IDs that were created by Joe Biden or something, but the fake IDs were so bad that they had similar birth dates to each other. Really? Okay.
>> Birth date, the address will come up and it's >> Do you know that here's an interesting little factoid for you. If you are in a room with uh hang on, let me find let me find it. Give me a second. Yeah, okay.
If [snorts] you're in a room with 23 people, there's about a 50% chance that two of them share the same birthday. It climbs to 99% by 57 people. I know that's surprising and it doesn't make sense, but that's how the math works.
How many people was she dealing with in this polling place that she was managing or whatever? More than 50, right?
Chances are she would see a lot of people with believe it or not the exact same birthday. The same day, not the same month, the same day. Because that's how math works. Yes, it's surprising at face value if you don't understand the math of it, but that's how it works.
Okay, according to this, people intuitively imagine someone matching them specifically and for that you need around 183 people to hit 50/50, but the birthday problem asks whether any two people in the room share a birthday, which is a much much looser condition.
With 23 people, you're not making 23 comparisons, you're making one comparison for every possible pair.
That's 23 * 22 over two, and that's 253 pairs. Each pair has a one in 365 chance of matching, and with 253 chances, the probability that none of them match drops below 50%. Calculate the probability nobody shares a birthday, then subtract from one. Person two has a 364 out of 365 chance of not matching person one.
Person three has 363 of 365 if not of not matching either. The point is, it's very simple math. That's just how it works. It takes 23 people to have a better than 50% chance that your birthday matches the birthday of somebody else in the room. That's the point. And she says, "Everybody had January 1st." I don't believe you. I think you saw two, maybe three people with the same birthday. Like July 15th or something. And you're like, "Wow, what are the chances?" Well, the chances are actually pretty good, as it turns out. But okay.
>> voters, so they took me off the poll pad, it's called.
>> correctly rejecting voters?
>> Yes. They all had the same birthday, like a whole group of people >> She's so [ __ ] stupid, dude. I swear to God. I'm sorry. She is so [ __ ] stupid. I'm glad they took her off the poll pad. She was rejecting voters? Are you [ __ ] kidding me? This is a constitutional right, dumbass.
>> come in, and they all have a January 1st, same year, birthday, the address will come up, and it's not even a home.
>> take your word for it. You You mean it's like an apartment building? Yes, that happens. People live in apartment buildings and not homes sometimes. That happened. Okay, so what happened on that?
>> Well, there were several things that were happening, so they put me in where the the ballots just get put in. They didn't want me on the poll pad anymore, cuz I was rejecting too many voters.
>> Okay, that makes sense. Still doesn't explain why you're in debt because you didn't attend January 6th though, right?
>> Without me seeing it, I I can't like I can't believe or even not believe. It's like it's air. So this is words. Like it's it's nothing. Like but what Okay.
>> Well, for example, a minor came in.
She's 17 years old. She knows damn well she can't vote. So I say, "Hey."
>> Maybe she I don't know.
>> I don't know.
She looked smart.
>> Did she think she could vote?
>> I don't know.
>> You can vote at 17 years old if you're going to be 18 by the by the time inauguration happens, I think. Is what it is. I don't remember exactly what the rule is. You can vote at 17. You can. So she rejected this girl who was perfectly within her legal rights to vote, I'm assuming. And I assume that because the girl went down the line and got a ballot from somebody else, some other person who isn't a [ __ ] >> Maybe, but I told her, "No, you can't because you're a minor. You have to be 18."
>> Yeah.
>> And they told her to go walk to the other end and they handed her a ballot.
>> Maybe because she was legally allowed to vote because she's going to be 18 by the time the next election or whatever, right? This woman drives me [ __ ] crazy. I'm sorry, man. It's so [ __ ] much.
>> So, you know, what's going on with it?
So as a registered independent, they let me be a poll worker. What I found out afterwards was that they didn't have any Republican poll workers there. They just had Democrat and independent. So that's how I got in, I guess. I was a Democrat in Massachusetts. I had voted that way.
>> She's absolutely not an independent.
It's a [ __ ] joke, an embarrassing joke for her to call herself an independent, really.
>> all along.
>> Where's this going?
>> It's going to my kind of meltdown, financial meltdown, I would call it >> Okay, so Trump didn't win in 2020.
>> Right.
>> He came back in 2024.
>> was crazy, yeah.
>> Okay, I mean an election is an election, whatever.
>> Right, yeah. 81 million votes for Biden, yeah.
>> Is that >> Yeah, why is that surprising? That was right within the margin of error. It's not like he claimed 375 million votes, okay? That's not a surprise to see 81 million votes. Trump got 78 million or something. It was right in there somewhere. These people are delusional. It drives me insane.
>> What's the number on that? I wasn't tracking.
>> Well, um >> Personally?
>> Yeah, well, I also did work for Look Ahead America and looked at voter rolls >> Look Ahead America's Do we what? Okay.
>> We were tracking people voting in multiple states. So, to say that there was no fraud >> There There was no fraud, okay? There was no [ __ ] fraud. My God, please get help. I'm begging you.
>> And to say it's incidental, if I'm finding it and I'm a nobody, then other people must see it.
>> I don't know what I WHAT I SAY ABOUT THAT. AGAIN, I don't know you're not saying anything. If you give me like a policy, usually people like that are just so it it it seems like you're you're on the extreme right, okay.
Usually people on the extreme left on this show, they give me like a political position that I can [ __ ] on. You're not even giving me one. You're just like saying like >> I'm not extreme.
>> You're like I >> I'm not extreme.
>> I don't know. You called >> [ __ ] please, how can she possibly say such a thing? She called herself a radical earlier. She cannot believe that she's not extreme, right?
>> one. You're just like saying on this show, they give me like a political position that I can [ __ ] on. You're not even giving me one. You're just like saying like >> I'm not extreme.
>> You're like I >> I'm not extreme.
>> I don't know. You called yourself radical. That is extreme.
>> Well, >> Like I'm using your own words.
>> like crazy liberal thinking that you know, Trump is a psycho and a a douche canoe we used to call him in roller derby.
>> But but everyone on the right hates >> I don't understand what the [ __ ] she is talking about right now.
>> But then everyone on the left hates Trump. I don't know. This is what they all do. This is what That's what I don't know. That's what >> I hate them both.
>> Oh, okay.
>> Yeah.
>> Okay. I mean I mean the only position you gave me is you saw people illegally voting. Like I can't >> Yeah, so >> deny or say I agree. Like I don't know.
I wasn't there. You're just saying something.
>> there to protect us, right? Your vote kind of doesn't matter at this point.
>> I'm confused. I do not understand what that has to do with a being laid or something or more I don't even know.
Finances. Okay. So you were radical in one direction and you moved radical in the other direction. It tends to happen.
I mean, trust me. Like super left Bernie Bros went super right as well. Like that tend People that fall for populism Many people are very populist. They tend to just go populism on any direction. I don't know. It's like I just try to stay as much as I can in the middle. I'll take >> Interesting. I mean, being in the middle is not virtuous. This is like This is the There's a fallacy for this, isn't there?
What's it called?
I'm trying to remember. Um objectivity bias maybe or something. The false center, I don't know. There is an objective answer on whether the Earth is flat. The objective answer is that no, it is not flat. And being in the middle on that is the wrong position, right?
Like there's nothing virtuous about being in the center on whether the Earth is flat. There are some things that are just factually true and that you are wrong about if you are in the middle.
Trump is a piece of [ __ ] He's a scam artist who is leeching his supporters dry of every penny that they own through scamming them. And he's a pedo. I think we can all agree on that, right? That's not on the left. That's just factual information.
>> positions on the right and left, just depending where facts are, but you definitely seem like you just go from radical to radical. I don't know, but regardless, I have no idea what the [ __ ] that has to do with any [ __ ] thing.
Okay, >> And from Massachusetts, my world is completely different. I was sitting on a pile of money. I ended up buying I said, you know what? Florida, I'm going to stay here. Um I had been dating somebody up north and we were going to move to Florida together.
>> Okay.
>> We split.
>> I hear Florida's nice.
>> It's very nice.
>> Okay.
>> And I said I fell in love with Florida anyway. So, that was in 2019.
>> Nice and red for you.
>> This is >> You don't think it's red? Why did she shrug her shoulders just now when he said nice and red for you? Is it not red? If Florida is not red enough for you, then you are a [ __ ] nutcase. I mean, we already knew that, I guess.
Generation is not a guarantee of political positioning or worldview.
You're absolutely correct on that. 100% agree. Um and it's probably not fair to say such a thing. Um however, [clears throat] there is a large there's a large proportion of the Boomer generation. I'm talking over 60 or 65. They almost all, right down the line, vote for Donald Trump consistently with almost no deviation.
Very little deviation at the very least.
So, it's not a sure sign, but it's, you know, it definitely points that direction, I would say.
>> Everyone's super nice and friendly.
>> Well, Florida is nice and red.
>> Also, I think she's a she's Gen X. I think they addressed that later. So, it doesn't really apply here anyway.
>> for you.
>> Yeah.
>> It's very Republican now.
>> Everybody's nice and friendly, though.
>> Okay.
>> Yeah.
>> I'm not getting like whistles in my ear for >> She's Well, I was going to repeat it so everybody know it she's not getting r a p e whistles in her ear is what she's saying here. Okay, well, I mean, I'm on the left and I that's literally never happened. I figure if you have one of those whistles going off in your ear, there might be a reason for it. Just sticking it out, you know, sticking it out there.
>> Having a different opinion.
>> For having a different opinion, she says. You get one of those whistles in your ear for having a different opinion, okay.
>> You ever wonder how much of your life is just for sale online like it's a clearance >> All right, let's jump forward. Hold on.
I'm just trying to There we go.
>> Let's get back to the show. Hopefully with fewer strangers knowing everything about you.
>> Is that what they do in Massachusetts?
>> They would, yes. Absolutely. Yes.
>> No, they wouldn't. If she went to like a protest, then people blow whistles and stuff. Like that's how it works, right?
Obviously.
>> So much of that going on. Nobody can >> Whistles?
>> Speak or Yes.
>> Okay, all >> No.
>> Austin is incredibly blue. One of the bluest cities in America. I have not got whistled at.
>> Well, because you're not out there with, you know, like a Trump shirt on.
>> Oh, you're right.
>> Oh, so you're you're starting [ __ ] with people and causing problems and that's why counter protesters is what it is is what you're saying. Counter protesters, okay, yes. That makes sense.
>> Or whatever, yeah. Which I don't >> either.
>> [ __ ] Cuz yeah, but if you did >> Just sound economics and >> Some weirdo with a whistle would come up and blow it in your ear.
>> you were in >> As if he wasn't saying some weirdo with a Trump shirt was shoving it in your face. Like, what is wrong with her, really?
>> Big protest, protest versus protest.
>> Yes.
>> So you got involved in >> Let's find out. Uh, Mark says that I'm wrong on boomers. I don't think that boomers as a whole are the problem, but let's see if uh, uh, proportionately vote. Let's see if we can find an answer to this. Again, I don't have a problem with people over 60, for example, obviously. But I think a very high proportion of them tend to vote for Trump, and that's a problem. And, you know, I I don't like to fall into this generational trap of all blank are to blame for our situation, um, because every single generation that moves to the next one. And it's going to be me who is to blame for economic issues pretty soon, even though I, you know, had to deal with the recession and everything else. That's just how it works. So, I don't want to make people think that like I'm in opposition to the Boomer generation or something. I'm definitely not. But, I believe that people over 60 disproportionately vote for Donald Trump, especially as compared to other generations, like a lot of Boomers vote for Donald Trump, a lot.
So, anyway, uh, that's my analysis as far as I can tell here. Boomers were actually the least MAGA shifting generation in 2024. They were already in support of Trump, and other generations shifted to Trump in 2024.
The strongest Trump-leaning age bracket isn't actually Boomers, apparently. It's voters aged 50 to 64, which is Generation X, interesting. The Reagan kids cohort, apparently. So, MAGA's strongest base is white voters 45 to 64, not just Boomers. Interesting. Okay.
Well, like I said, every generation has their connection to Donald Trump.
>> And the crazy [ __ ] >> Yes, a little bit.
>> not surprised. That gets heated when two political factions go out it on the street.
>> Absolutely, but one can debate and one cannot.
>> Oh, [ __ ] please. One can and one cannot. What you do is not debating. You think you're debating right now? You're living in another [ __ ] dimension. Like nothing that she has said so far is factual. Nothing. And she doesn't seem to understand what a fact even is based on what she said a minute ago. She said What was it she said? Oh, she was just making [ __ ] up about going to the polling place and like rejecting voters and [ __ ] I don't even I don't even know that she was lying there. She may have just like genuinely not understood that people can have the same birthday. In fact, it's extremely likely that two people will have the same birthday out of a group of 23. She may not have understood that at 17 you can actually vote if you're going to be 18 by the by inauguration or whatever it is. I don't remember. A polling worker should know that information, right?
>> Okay, yeah.
>> some facts and one does not.
>> Oh, my god, dude.
>> Also, just depends on what facts we agree with. I don't know. I I I took a political compass test the other day. I lean left socially and I lean right economically. It's like, sure, but what can you say just like facts are? Like >> Okay, you can't say you lean right economically anymore. You're not allowed to say that anymore. You know why?
Because the left are the fiscal security people now. The left are the ones that are doing fiscally responsible things.
The right is pushing the Iran war and uh, driving the debt up and they've been driving the debt up for a long [ __ ] time now. The right no longer gets to claim that they're the fiscal that they're the party of fiscal responsibility.
>> Who even knows what that is? What can you back up with anything? I Oh my gosh, you're going to make me sick. Okay, so what's an indisputable fact?
>> Indisputable fact, indisputable fact, 17-year-old got to vote in our election.
>> That's complete nonsense.
It's possible that maybe she was allowed to vote because she was going to be 18 by the time the election took place, which is legal. But you don't know any of that information because you just rejected her out of hand. And either way, who [ __ ] cares? It's a 17-year-old, really. You don't know that she was even breaking the rules.
>> Hey, that's not an indisputable fact because like I might believe it happened, but you can't say it's an indisputable fact just something that only you saw. That's like cuz you can't show someone that. You Right? This isn't a scientific report that we can be like this is an indisputable fact.
>> But I tell the truth.
>> Okay, you tell the truth as you understand it. But we don't know that that's the actual truth. You don't even know that that's the actual truth.
That's the issue here, right? You didn't stick around long enough. You didn't deal with the situation for long enough to know that that's the truth. That's why we need actual real factual information that we can verify.
>> Okay. [laughter] >> need to lie about anything.
>> have to believe >> You don't have to be lying.
>> believe that, I guess. I met you Okay, we've been filming for 13 minutes 37 seconds. So I met you 20 minutes ago.
Okay?
>> I actually saw so much stuff that day.
>> Okay.
>> I had a notarized statement that I turned in to the election committee. I was that upset.
>> What does that have to do with that?
>> is going on. So just think about it.
>> Okay.
>> You see You see all this stuff going on.
>> And maybe others did too, but honestly, I'm not I don't really I'm not in that world. That's not one of my big things to >> Yeah, so this is my perspective. I go in there thinking that, you know, everything is lovely. We have our rights, and you know, that's why I volunteered to be >> She obviously did not go in there thinking everything is lovely and we have our rights. She was looking for people to reject. She was looking for opportunities to help Donald Trump, obviously, right? She was looking for reasons to reject people. You did not believe everything was lovely. Don't even pretend otherwise.
>> a poll worker. I get paid to do it regardless for my job.
>> Well, states run the elections, get Florida to make it more strict. I don't know.
>> Yeah, and the way they make it more strict is to have ID. But when you're >> Yeah, it's hard.
>> ID, they >> Well, you do have to have ID to vote.
Everywhere. Literally [ __ ] everywhere. It's uh you have to have an ID to register. And once you're registered, you have your signature and your address down and your birth date and all of the information you need. And you have to enter that information when you vote. To subvert an election, to steal somebody's identity, to vote in their name, A, they would have to have not voted already because that's caught.
And B, you would have to have their name, birthday, and be able to match their signature identically. And if they vote, then you're caught. None of that happened. That did not happen. They're trying to add the additional step of having an ID when you vote to make things more difficult. There really is no reason for it. But you know what? I don't give a [ __ ] Whatever.
>> they take you off the poll pad so that somebody will take your ID.
>> in Florida. I don't know. Florida's not a left state by any means. I'm pretty sure they have a complete ownership on all branches of government in Florida.
>> Yes, I believe they do.
>> All right, if I'm not mistaken, probably >> or Orlando.
>> Doesn't matter. It's state election laws.
>> Right. Yeah, but it's depends on who gives you the ballot.
>> And this is like >> Oh, [ __ ] please.
>> County with a [ __ ] ton of debt, someone voted illegally?
>> Absolutely. Well, think about it. I'm in there, everything is lovely. I believe that our government is working for us.
>> She definitely just came on here to spread her complete [ __ ] garbage everywhere, right? Although I think that it worked against her actually. I think that she came across as a complete nutcase and not rational at all. Um, I think that was probably the effect.
>> They're not. Nobody cares. It's It's done. Right?
>> Sure, [clears throat] okay. Yeah.
>> Yeah. So, I'm I'm moved to Florida, everything's great. Um >> Okay, so it was in Massachusetts where that was happening.
>> No, that was all in Florida.
>> Then why did you say so I moved to Florida? Okay.
>> Yeah.
>> Sequence of >> He's a douchebag.
>> Yeah, we're in Florida now. Yes.
>> Okay, you're in Florida now. Okay, and >> What I bought for my little beach cottage in Flor- in Massachusetts, I bought >> Dang, you gave up a beach beach cottage in Massachusetts? That's like dreams and goals, though.
>> Right, but I'm not I don't have boomer wealth.
>> Well, you're not a boomer, that's for sure.
>> Yeah, I'm close, I think. I don't know.
>> Oh, you're a boomer. What?
>> I'm Gen X.
>> Okay, okay. Boomer >> Okay, we want to go to red state. We want to leave blue state.
>> Okay, I don't know what that was. Uh, I don't Yeah, I think that she's actually Gen X, not boomer. There aren't very many boomers anymore, actually, I don't think. Born between 1946 and 1964, if I'm not mistaken. And 1964 is pretty late in the game, right? Like, boomers are named that way because they are the children of the World War II veterans who came back after World War II and had a bunch of children. So, World War II ended officially in 1940, when was it? 1946 or 1948? There were still people over there doing denazification in 1948.
Um although there was Japan as well. So, we'll say 1948 to have a nice shorter number. Um and then they have, you know, three or four kids over the course of 10 years. So, 1958 really feels like the limit to me of the Boomer generation, but I think it's 64.
>> They go to red state. Okay, that >> Yeah, where there's just a little more more sanity.
>> Especially with all the COVID stuff that was going on. There you go. Very good.
Okay, sure. So, that's why you're in Florida. Okay, so it's not because So, what are you saying that you could have overturned the election if you were there on January 6th and that would have stopped all the COVID issues?
>> I could have been in a prison in a gulag somewhere or wherever they're putting people.
>> So, you wouldn't be in debt because you're in a you would be in a gulag?
>> Well, partially, right?
I'd be done >> I think she's saying that she wouldn't be in debt because she'd be getting part of this massive payoff from the government. Uh the insurrectionists are are getting paid out by the US government for helping Trump commit his insurrection.
>> And four?
>> Um okay. Okay, very good. So, you moved to Florida to get a little taste of uh red. Now you're red. Very good. Okay.
So, you went from extreme left to extreme right. You are not independent.
You are not independent. You are not independent. I'm independent. When people like you say independent, it ruins people who actually are.
>> You're not independent.
>> Okay, that's funny.
I appreciate that. Um independent is the incorrect position on a lot of things anyway. So, I don't really see independent or see identifying as independent as virtuous at all. Like the Earth is not flat, okay? There is no middle ground on that. It's There is no I'm independent on whether it's flat or it's round. No, it's round. There are correct answers to things.
>> Independent?
>> I I don't >> Just own your [ __ ] It's okay. Don't listen to everyone, but you're clearly you already have your world views. Dude own it. I don't care if someone's left or right, but own it. Don't say you're independent.
>> Absolutely independent.
>> Bro.
>> [ __ ] please.
>> I can I do not like what Trump's doing right now at all.
>> What? What don't you like?
>> About I cuz I don't know enough about it, right? Like Iran with the war and >> You like even when she said I don't like what he's doing, she's still hedging and blaming herself. It's not what Trump is doing that I don't like, it's that I don't understand enough about it. That's the issue. She can't just say I don't like what Trump is doing. What the [ __ ] is wrong with her? Honestly.
>> First off like >> What what what part?
>> Because he said >> But is it because of America first?
>> He didn't >> Or is it because >> Yeah, like >> Well, there you go. That's usually a more right-leaning populist perspec- perspective.
>> Yeah. Cuz we should take care of our people here.
>> go. That's usually that position on the anti-Iran comes from the right populist.
Like Fuentes and stuff. Okay? Very good. So that means I'm not screaming centrist.
>> So she didn't just disavow Fuentes. Do you notice that? People in this world know who Fuentes is. If she does not disavow him, there's a reason for it.
>> Just to me. What else do you disagree with, centrist?
>> A lot of things. I'm socially liberal as well.
>> What?
>> In some ways. You should have We should be able to help out people. This country has so much money. We're just printing it for some reason.
>> Well, what the [ __ ] did I thought you were describing how you're socially liberal, and now you're talking about monetary policy where we're just printing money. You know, we can print money like that. It's possible for us to do because we have an independent Federal Reserve. That's how that works.
>> I mean, 50% of it goes to the health and taking care of people.
>> I can't print my own money.
>> Well >> Well, the Federal Reserve can.
>> Yeah, that wouldn't be very good.
>> paying taxes for?
>> Huh?
>> What am I paying taxes for?
>> I'm so [ __ ] lost, dude.
>> Well, 50% again to health and taking care of people.
I mean, even though I'm sure there's also fraud and a lot of [ __ ] but okay, so you disagree with >> Lots of it.
>> No, I don't think there's that much fraud. I think there's almost no fraud.
After Elon Musk went in there and cut like tried to completely upend everything with uh Doge and they didn't discover a single example, not one concrete example of actual real fraud.
Or if they did discover a real example of actual real fraud, is it safe to assume they got rid of it? That they got rid of that that that fraud?
>> Well, you but you say I disagree with Trump. When you say that, you just mean Iran, which has split the right.
>> Well, it's just that all the things that he campaigned on don't doesn't seem to be coming to fruition.
>> But it is usually those people that say that from the right-wing perspective is because the not enough deportations, so they're upset with our from the Trump administration, uh the war on Iran cuz it's not American first America first.
Well, what else?
>> That that's it. So, she's coming at it from the right. She's bitching about the things that Trump is doing from the far right. She's further right than Donald Trump is the point.
>> You're not centrist, lady. Let's just be honest. You're not centrist. You come from the right the right perspective the the the the right-wing perspective, but own it. I don't give a Own it, though. Don't say you're centrist. You're not centrist. You said your only liberal belief is you're okay having a little bit of welfare. Every every modern economy believes that.
Everyone believes that. Okay, that's not >> All right, so you wanted to know how this all ended up happening, right?
>> Yes, please. Yeah, take me there.
>> So, I'm it's now 2021, bought my house, which Okay, here's a liberal thing. I bought a swinger's house, probably.
>> it or not, believe it or not, regardless of political Wait, why is that liberal to have a swinger's house? Is she's I'm not even sure what she's talking about here. Is she saying that she had people over that she was living with, or is she saying that this house used to belong to swingers? Is that Is that what she means? I can't even [ __ ] tell.
>> political ideology.
>> Yeah.
>> Just going to let you know. But okay, yeah, very very left of you.
>> I had to invest some of the money from the sale of my house into this house.
So, I wasn't >> That's just how it works when selling a house and buying a house.
>> Yeah. So, it hadn't been updated since '93.
>> I was like, why did you buy a house that would require that much work to bring it up to date three decades?
>> love with it.
>> Why?
>> Because it looked like a house that a Florida person would come out of in a pastel suit and a Ferrari in the yard.
>> it's like a house built in Florida.
>> Yes.
>> Feels like there's probably more of them.
>> Yes. The whole neighborhood looks like that.
>> And it had a pool.
>> Oh, that's very rare for Florida.
>> After grinding for 40 years, >> Yes, yes, yes.
>> I deserve this.
>> Grinding doing what? No such thing as deserve, by the way. [ __ ] you.
>> I absolutely deserve it.
>> Okay.
>> I was cleaning >> Well, there is an entitlement or left position of you. You deserve No, you don't. You don't get.
>> Why is that considered left-wing?
Like, to say that I deserve something?
Who on the left says, "I deserve this"?
I I'm sorry, I don't even know Like, where is that coming from?
>> Work and get or don't. It's up to you what you do with your life.
>> Yeah.
>> But go ahead.
>> So, I'm like 16 years old counting pills in a pharmacy and giving out medications to people. It was legal >> Wow.
>> What trauma? Okay.
>> I'm cleaning hotel I'm talking about like people that don't have to do these things now.
>> What the [ __ ] is she talking about?
People don't count pills in pharmacies today?
>> Who are having their parents taking care of them. Like me, I was working this whole time.
>> My kid works. My kid started working at I think 16, maybe 17. And people start working at 16 or 17. That's how our [ __ ] economy works. What are you talking about? I'm on the left and I have a kid who works. And I worked at 16. Yes, I believe I was 16.
>> And now I'm seeing like it doesn't matter where my taxes go.
Cleaning dirty hotel beds in a hotel, having to wear gloves.
>> I don't know what are you What are you saying right now? Literally everybody has to [ __ ] work.
>> now. You worked.
>> Congratulations. You did what everyone does.
>> Yeah.
>> Okay.
>> So after 40 years of doing that, >> Yeah.
>> I'm done. I want to have a year to myself.
>> to yourself? What entitlement is this?
What [ __ ] entitlement? [ __ ] you.
Until modern civilization, people just worked and died on the field. I don't give a [ __ ] You You don't deserve anything.
>> I absolutely do.
>> No, you absolutely don't. No one deserves anything. I don't deserve anything. If >> That's [clears throat] funny. You know that the the Boomer generation used to be called the Me generation. They were selfish or whatever. They were called selfish by their parents. I think that's interesting. Not that again, I don't think that there's anything I think that categorizing people by the year they were born is kind of silly. I don't think it's fair to do that. I'll be honest. Um I do think though that a disproportionate number of people from that generation are causing big problems in society right now though.
>> If I work hard, if I'm strategic with my money, I can afford reap what I sow. No one deserves. I'm sorry the only things I would be okay with deserve is like yeah maybe basic like minimum food and we got that and you know just like making sure people survive. Okay, I'm good with that part. Sounds like you are too but deserve you don't deserve no one deserves to take a year off of work.
>> No, I worked during the whole thing. I worked during my >> Sounds like you didn't take a year off.
>> year of 2025.
>> Okay, uh-huh. The house >> Uh okay. This looks like a normal ass house. I don't know.
I just pulled it up on Zillow so >> It's very special.
>> No.
>> It was special to me and that's why I bought it.
>> No.
>> You can say it's special to you and you cannot argue with that. Okay, if she feels it's special to her then it is.
>> Yeah, changed the pool to salt water.
>> What?
>> Yeah, painted inside had to get rid of that carpet.
>> Paint?
>> Didn't know what was in that carpet. Had to get all the mirrors off the walls.
>> Wow.
>> mirrors.
>> Hero, the trauma you've been through in your boomer life.
>> So there goes We're going to learn you today.
>> Yeah, learn me something. You learned me that you did pill separation. I definitely bet the person who gives me my monthly medication doesn't do that.
>> Probably not cuz it's illegal now.
>> What? Does [ __ ] count pills?
>> Count pills, yeah.
>> Um I don't understand. I I I'm not even convinced that it's like they have little pill counters. They didn't had they didn't have pill counters before.
Are you saying you want to go back to the good old days when they used to count pills by hand because a lot of mistakes were made back then, a lot.
>> Yeah, but when you're making money when you're young. Okay, I don't I don't [ __ ] know. I wasn't I I worked at Steak 'n Shake at age.
>> Here is all like this [ __ ] going on where obviously we don't have a government that gives a [ __ ] about us.
>> gosh.
>> So I'm like so why is I'm now I'm getting stressed because of work.
>> Yeah, what do you What's your job stressed out?
>> Yeah.
>> Huh?
>> So I said you know I got >> job.
>> I'm a project manager for energy management.
>> out being a product project manager or something AI can basically do for you.
God.
>> I I don't think I don't think project manager is going to be replaced by AI. I think that's one of the jobs that probably needs a human to do it. Um honestly, like I think that AI is going to I'll tell you what AI has done in the software field. It's basically replaced all or it is basically promoted all junior developers to management. So AI in programming is effectively like a junior developer. And now you, the previous junior developer, are responsible for the code and you tell it to go out and to do this and fix this stuff and you review the code and make sure that it works. Um I think that the way AI is going to affect the software field is they're not going to hire people without a degree anymore. I think that's what it's going to do. I think I I don't have a degree in software engineering, but I've been doing it literally since I was 9 years old.
Literally, I was nine and I was writing C, not C++. That's for Now Uh there goes monetization. I was writing in C at nine. That's not going to happen anymore because people are just because AI makes programming it just changes the face of the industry.
That's all. And if you know, people don't have a reason to learn coding directly anymore. They don't need to because AI does all of the coding for you now. So I don't know. I think there's still value in learning to code directly though.
>> How you stressed being a project manager?
>> It was the situations that I was in >> Yeah.
>> within this company.
>> me guess, the project became complicated.
>> No, I could handle complicated.
>> The people became complicated.
>> Yes.
>> Oh, that never happened.
>> I thought you said you couldn't you could handle complicated. What happened to that?
>> Happens in social workplaces environments at all with humans, complicated creatures. Drowning in student loans with massive >> Okay, moving forward. No, thank you, sir.
>> from the high interest trap and get your finances under control once and for all.
>> But here I am, like 40 years of grinding and I get some medical bad news.
>> Cancer?
>> And I was um I actually have a aneurysm in one of my aortas, but it was due to stress. So.
>> Okay, is it still there?
>> Yes.
>> Okay, what do you do about it?
>> Yeah, well, the first doctor basically was just telling me that there's nothing I can do about it and I'm just going to have to deal with it and it'll burst.
>> Okay.
>> We're going to monitor it.
>> And when it does, what happens?
>> You die.
>> Well, that's not good.
>> Right, yeah.
>> Okay. So >> They refused to do anything.
>> You were stressed, you take like a medication or something? Like I don't know.
>> Yeah, so I I did all the things. I lost the weight, I went down to 135. I was in my goal weight. So this is all before this financial meltdown >> Financial meltdown.
>> Right. And Yolo 2025.
>> Ah, yep, the year of January 6th.
>> Yeah, well, that's that's that's the that's the basis of this cuz I was happy happy happy. That happened.
>> You're happy until January 6th happened and then you were angry? Which led you to be in stress and getting an aneurysm?
>> Um it's related.
>> That's scary. Uh first of all, I'm not convinced it's due to stress, but maybe I suppose. Okay. And second, I believe an aneurysm is basically where the blood vessel's wall gets weak, like your you know, your I don't know, your aorta's wall is weak and the blood pressure starts pushing it out like a balloon basically. It's It's pushing on it and it's now a little pocket and it has weaker walls in that pocket because it had to stretch out and it could burst at any moment and if it does you will bleed out internally and die. People get aneurysms in their brain sometimes and there's no fixing that. It's just yeah, that's it. Goodbye basically horrifyingly. I'm sorry to say that's generally how it works and um if she has one in her heart, at least it's not the brain. Maybe you could have a surgery but it would be very very dangerous, very risky to do surgery like that. Um I don't know. I don't know. I don't know how one would even do that. That's a really really bad situation.
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