...so they deliberately made the designs unworkable and planted hundreds of 'clues' to this effect that he is the first to discover.
That's a pretty perfect delusion. The original engineers -- known giants of their field -- left clues that have gone unnoticed by generations of professional engineers, in designs that have been reused and duplicated for decades after. And the only person in the world who notices them is a guy claiming a three-year degree. And what does he do? Makes anonymous YouTube videos. Yeah, that has "delusion of grandeur" written all over it.
Jay, what do you know about Institut Supérieur de l'Aéronautique et de l'Espace?
It exists. It's an accredited three-year program, but you can study practically any science topic there, to any depth. You could apparently major in radar knobs, for all the world knows. It's suspicious that in his video he says one is awarded a degree just for being accepted there; no exams required. I wonder what he means by that.
The
Institut is a new thing; he claims a diploma from the earlier
Ecole, which as of 2007 is now part of this larger institute at Toulouse. This makes it hard to assess the strength of the program based on comparative rankings. But according to the 2012 international rankings, the
Institut ranks in the low 4,000s. By comparison Carnegie-Mellon is ranked #22, Purdue is #20. One of my
alma maters U. of Michigan is ranked #8 (Go Blue!), and the university I taught at is ranked #79. Yes, I'm sure you can get a job at Dassault with one of their degrees, but you might be installing radar knobs. His was a three-year program. I went to school for more than a decade. Do the math.
I don't think I've ever seen a bad candidate from MIT.
Nope. I sent my brightest student there, where he promptly earned a PhD and is now a research fellow at Google. He can't ski worth a darn, but that's not part of the curriculum in Cambridge.