This guy is a Canadian?
If "this guy" is Calvin Smith -- the talking head of the video -- then yes. The notion of using any large language model to prove anything theologically is laughable. But it gets clicks -- which is the likely goal. Because their is solicitation for the "ministry" via several routes in the various associated links.
Of the YouTube channel, one finds it is named "Answers in Genesis Canada." Its associated website is "https://answersingenesis.org/." Oddly, whois says the organization was registered in Kentucky. Calvin Smith (apparently in Ontario, Canada) is the individual in the video, it seems. Mentioned in the website, Ken Ham is the "founder" and both the Creation Museum and Ark Encounter mentioned are in northern Kentucky. Calvin Smith's X channel, joined in 2018, states "@AnswersCanada hasn't posted - When they do, their posts will show up here." ( https://x.com/AnswersCanada )
SocialBlade suggests Smith's YouTube channel is not doing well in earnings through AdSense (Google/YouTube).
https://socialblade.com/youtube/channel/UChAfMe69LAQWdU3sKmZiaSw
What one observes from the FR scoreboard is that ALL of Canada (i.e. 2 Freepers) has put about $85 to the current Freeapthon.
See: https://freerepublic.com/donate/scoreboard
It is interesting that a number of Freepers post to their own self-promoting "donate" sites these days.
Meanwhile, asking any large languauge model -- AI -- to "prove" is simply silly, not to mention unscriptural.
But it's darn fine click bait.
From an organization based in Kentucky. The message -- donate.
Small footnote. Before he passed, ex-preisdent Carter was guest of the AiG ministry to "help build the Ark." In Kentucky.