D
Dorsal
Guest
Simple..he's the Silverback of the house..
Michael's a fuckwit wanker plain and simple, obviously you are a Michael lover so I won't bother trying to convince you. I am just gobsmacked that he has any fans at all.
There was a day Jumpy when I would fight the good fight, but sadly this family friendly & heavily edited BB just doesnt light the fire in me anymore. I wish you well in your quest though, reckon you're on to something there.
He just seems like a bogan that can actually string a sentence together.
Simple..he's the Silverback of the house..
I didn't even think an IQ of 135 was super high. Really surprised if that is genius level. Heaps of people in my office (all consulting engineers where we need to know how to write, do math, speak in public) got over 135 in an online test, some around 150. I know tests can be different, etc. but trust me I don't think many are geniuses.
When modern IQ tests are devised, the mean (average) score within an age group is set to 100 and the standard deviation (SD) almost always to 15, although this was not always so historically. Thus, the intention is that approximately 95% of the population scores within two SDs of the mean, i.e. has an IQ between 70 and 130.
Membership requirement
Mensa's only requirement for membership is one score at or above the 98th percentile on certain standardised IQ or other approved intelligence tests, such as the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scales. Because different tests are scaled differently, it is not meaningful to compare raw scores between tests, only percentiles. For example, the minimum accepted score on the Stanford-Binet is 132, while for the Cattell it is 148. But most IQ tests are designed to yield a mean score of 100 with a standard deviation of 15; the 98th-percentile score under these conditions is 130.82.
Mensa also has its own application exam, and some national groups offer alternative batteries of culture-fair, non-language tests. These exams are proctored by Mensa and do not provide a quantified score; they serve only to qualify a person for membership. In some national groups, a person may take a Mensa offered test only once, although one may later submit an application with results from a different qualifying test. For some national Mensa groups, such as American Mensa, having a high enough score on some graduate school admissions exams is enough to qualify for Mensa membership. At least one other high-IQ society, the Triple Nine Society, also accepts Mensa's own application exam for membership in its own ranks, with the minimum qualifying score being an IQ of 149.
Source.
boring... that's what your posts are. You are
basically reinforcing my point - why the fuck is Michael the so called 'leader?'
Did anyone see the way they all waited for his approval before they jumped behind the couch to surprise Ava? Why the FUCK was that his decision?
I hate him so, so, so much
I didn't even think an IQ of 135 was super high. Really surprised if that is genius level. Heaps of people in my office (all consulting engineers