It's interesting to note that there have been three individuals here who have claimed that I "think I know everything": you, Chrissy and Killshot. Let's examine that: a lawyer, a prof and a doctor. Three individuals who have high status positions. And not just high status positions, but ones in which they're unaccustomed to people questioning them or not showing them deference. None of you deal well with that.
The greatest gift my old man gave me was getting me to read and not just read, but read a lot about a lot of different things, when I was young. In the the hundred or so hours you're here every week, I'm often reading about many different things. We react very differently to things we don't know. When someone addresses something I didn't know about something I care about, without fail, I read about it. In contrast, your reaction, like Chrissy's and Killshot's, is to insecurely exclaim that "You think you know everything," as an 11 year-old reacts when he realizes that someone else knows something he does not. Instead of wasting as many hours as you do here, spend more time reading. When's the last time you read a book cover-to-cover? What was it about? How often do you read? I hate to say this because I know how deep it cuts, but I love you dearly: you react in a way not ulike how Trump would react. A childish, petulant kind of reaction. I can and have listed all sorts of topics of which I know little or nothing (current pop culture, baseball, physics, car engines, women). But I do know a lot of things about a lot of different topics, not because I'm special, but because I had a parent who made it a priority to gain knowledge in a lot of things of consequence.