The best response I’ve heard against the simulation hypothesis is “If we’re simulated, why aren’t we asked to do meaningful work?” Think about why we would want to simulate personalities in our near to medium term future: to answer questions, to help us work faster, to entertain us, to be our companions, etc.
So why aren’t we asked to complete the equivalent of Mechanical Turk questions? Is compute is so unfathomably cheap that they there’s no economic reason we would need to “pay rent” so to speak? Even if that’s the case, why don’t our creators want to interact with us directly? In other words, if we’re all video game characters, who is the player character? Why do I have consciousness, if I’m just an NPC?
And on and on. The crux is whether you believe that in the world that allows us to be simulated, it’s more likely that our creator just wants to view us through a thick pane of glass than they’ll want to play with us. My intuition is very much on the later.
Mongolian BBQ is completely divorced from the ethnic cuisine of Mongolia, which is heavy in meat and fat and (within my limited knowledge) not very flavorful. I’ve watched a food vlog and … yeah, it’s fatty lamb boiled in plain broth. Food is subjective, but I’m sure that wasn’t what you were thinking.
What we know as Mongolian BBQ was actually invented in Taiwan on the 1950′s and given that name for a pretty arbitrary reasons. (As an aside how many food names with a country name are actually from that place? Usually it’s tenuous connections at best like how Hawaiian pizza was named because of pineapples and actually invented in Canada).