Out of everyone in this thread, no one's put more effort into educating you as Jay has. He's made a great number of long posts explaining, in detail, where you go wrong, and instead of listening to him and responding to his points, you ignore him rudely time and time again. I don't understand why Jay's wasting so much of his life trying to educate you, but you've got some nerve asking him for an extra after all this.
Befuddled Old Man -- "Aw, shucks guys, I'm just not understanding you, so could you repeat everything all over again" -- is a plot device in Jabba's fantasy play that lets him appear to be engaged in the debate without actually having to address any of its points. Additionally it shifts blame for the obstruction onto his opponents. But the drama here is so poorly written that Befuddled Old Man has devolved into a harbinger of sorts. When he appears, that's when you know that Jabba knows he is intractably stuck and needs to bail out.
As you are probably aware, Jabba's pattern of argumentation is to embody his line of reasoning as a syllogism among words whose definitions he either leaves vague so that he can equivocate among different connotations, or defines in a personal way -- which is another method of achieving the same equivocal result. While it's nice to talk about sampling the centuries according to whether human life is probable among them, the real point of equivocation in his argument this month seems to be "now".
He outright said that it can be any point in all of time. He needs it to be, otherwise he can't convolve it with his century and get a tiny number. The sense in which his claim would be true is the sense in which I pointed out that Jesus, Richard III, and Abraham Lincoln have all recorded statements invoking "now" in a way that referred to different points in time in the past few thousand years. That would seem to indicate that "now" can pop up at various points of time. Instead, all those usages refer to the lifespan of the speaker -- in fact, very specific subsets of their lifetimes. The way Jesus used it did not refer to the same
absolute time point as Richard III meant. And while Lincoln's "Now we are engaged in a great civil war..." obviously incorporates the few years of war preceding the Gettysburg address and extends to the few remaining years," Lincoln's "Now we are engaged..." cannot reasonably mean Feb. 22, 2018 or April 6, 10,221 B.C.
While "now" can mean various points in time, it can do so only according to rules. Those rules are what Jabba means to break. The "now" in Richard III's "Now is the winter of our discontent..." means the end of the War of the Roses, not some arbitrary point in time. If I, Jay, say today, "Now is the end of the War of the Roses," that would not be true. The War of the Roses was hundreds of years ago; today is today. "Now" refers to whenever it was said by the person, which makes its statistical value rather dependent on who says it. That's the rule. The fact that it's been said many times throughout recorded history by many people doesn't immediately transform it into a uniform random variable governing one single invocation of "now", which is what it would have to be in order to work in Jabba's proof the way he needs. When Jabba says, "What is the likelihood that 'now' would coincide with something," his "now" is not talking about the day the Spanish Armada was defeated, or the day Moses brought the tablets down from the mountain, or the day something hit Earth and calved the Moon. None of those are reasonable candidates for "now" as Jabba means when he asks for likelihood. So not a uniform random variable.
His critics having now (See how I used that word?) exposed the equivocation over "now" in his argument, Jabba realizes they have once again homed in on the pea in his shell game and the jig is up. So expect some wild gesticulations trying to keep the meaning of "now" up in the air, or an abrupt change of terminology to avoid "communication problems."