Thinking With Your Balls
What does the world look like to the world's smartest, high-T men?
There he is.
In the upper-right corner of the chart—circled in red like a divine target of awe and envy—stands the outlier among outliers. The man with the highest testosterone and the highest IQ in a national sample of over 15,000 men.
Forget your citations. He doesn’t need sources.
He doesn’t need to cite studies, win debates, or write manifestos.
He just thinks with his balls—and he’s still smarter than you.
This chart, taken from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health, is a sobering visualization for midwits everywhere. The average man clusters in the center—mediocre testosterone, mediocre IQ. A gentle downward slope in the linear fit suggests the old stereotype: brute or brain, but rarely both.
But then there’s him.
Not just a statistical anomaly. A legend. A myth. A biological contradiction.
While the rest of us trade off strength for strategy, or aggression for intellect, he stands alone—untouched by the compromises evolution usually forces upon us. He probably built a squat rack out of bookshelves. He probably calculates macros in his head while solving quantum field equations.
And what’s more? He probably doesn’t even know he’s on this chart.
Because he’s too busy doing something real.
You won’t find him arguing online.
You won’t find him crafting threads.
He doesn’t run a podcast.
He runs laps.
He runs numbers.
He runs you over without noticing.
This post is a tribute—not to mediocrity, not to averages, not to balance. But to that guy.
The high-T, high-IQ sigma beast who proves that sometimes, the edge case isn’t the exception.
It’s the future.
Thinking With Your Balls
Let’s take the experiment one step further.
What would our anomaly—this apex man of intellect and instinct—make of now? What does the world look like from that high, lonely perch in the top-right corner of the chart?
We’ll give him no ideology, only clarity. No allegiance, only pattern recognition.
Let’s start with two recent headlines.
1. Israel vs Iran: Power Theater with a Backdrop
The outlier sees through the posturing.
He doesn’t take sides in ancient blood feuds, but he understands leverage. Israel isn’t escalating because of existential threat—it’s escalating because it still believes it can hide behind U.S. hard power. It believes in the American blank check.
But he also knows American power is no longer unipolar. The illusion is cracking. The calculus is shifting. And a war launched under the assumption of U.S. invincibility may end up exposing the very limits of it.
To the outlier, this isn’t about “good guys vs bad guys.” It’s a test.
A test of whether an aging hegemon can still protect its proxies without revealing its own vulnerability. If the illusion breaks, the world map reshuffles.
2. Riots in Los Angeles: A Trap is Being Set
He watches the riots with zero emotional investment. No moral panic. No cheering. Just data.
He sees what most miss: Trump isn’t simply organizing military parades for show. He’s baiting. By creating a highly visible patriotic display, he incites precisely the kind of opposition that needs to be seen. Not suppressed. Mapped.
To the average observer, this is polarization. To the outlier, it’s filtration. The more reactive the crowd, the easier it is to trace the network. With every protester livestream, every violent outburst, the machine sharpens its resolution.
And behind it, quietly: Palantir.
Not waving a flag. Not giving speeches. Just building the most advanced dissident-mapping system the world has ever seen.
He knows that power doesn’t arrest everyone. Power tags you, and waits.




