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Now, here's where it gets juicy. In Young Sheldon, we see this kid obsessed with science, trains, and all things logical—but there's always this undercurrent of him rejecting social norms and modern conveniences when they don't suit him. Remember episodes where he builds contraptions or experiments that go hilariously wrong? Fast-forward to adult Sheldon in Big Bang Theory: he's a theoretical physicist, but let's be real, the guy's a Luddite at heart—hates change, clings to routines, and has zero patience for "inefficient" tech like smartphones or social media.
Kaczynski took that to the extreme: after Berkeley, he quits academia, moves to a remote Montana cabin with no electricity or running water, and starts his anti-tech crusade. Is Young Sheldon setting up the prequel to that? Maybe the show ends with Sheldon having an epiphany about how technology is destroying humanity, grabs a typewriter, and heads for the hills. Bonus: Sheldon's love for trains? Kaczynski's manifesto obsesses over how railroads symbolize industrial oppression. Mind. Blown.