@ankushchakraborty5353

1) We can all agree that he has an above average level of intelligence, but very unlikely  to be even close to Terrence Tao. 
2) He is indeed very promising, but the publicity stunt is undeniable. Attributing him as  prodigy, junior Einstein is too much. 
3) The parents ought to understand that such narratives will work against him in the future. Your video was at worst a constructive skepticism. You  understood that the child himself was not to be blamed for, but others won't shy away from calling him Fraud, stunt puller etceatra. 
4) I however think that, apart from the public stunts, if his parents had encouraged him to do serious Mathematics with passion. In India and also in US or UK, or infact most countries, there are this kids who are sort of promising. A few people make it to the newspapers,for instance for ending up writing very good (not revolutionary though) research papers. Ofcourse nice to see that, but what the Parents need to understand is that if they become overdramatic and overhype things, it will likely become overwhelming for the child at some point of time, because the expectations will be too high and the child himself might get consumed by the idea of being a genius. All of this could cause not only a lot of outside noise but a pressure from within to come up with legendary /revolutionary works. This might become a source of tremandious mental distress.

@md.adnannabib2066

Bangladeshi here, most of us know his father is fraud. He is attention seeker.props to you for holding the truth

@AhmadUnNafis

Bangladeshi here , his father became a meme back in 2018 for unhinged behavior. 
Mr. Rashed Bari lost his sh!t when Bangladeshi TV channels  doubted  his claims .

@Agnostoic

I am from Bangladesh. His father has been on my Facebook friend list for a long time, so I have seen him robbing his child's childhood. Lately, he has been trying hard to prove himself as an Indian since he has received a lot of backlash here due to his fraudulent activities. He has also gained attention in the Bangladeshi media. I don’t understand why reporters fail to scrutinize this person’s background and the activities he has been involved in for so long.
Not just Bangladeshi media, but even some UK-based media outlets have also given them attention they don’t deserve. Instead, they should be exposed. What is lacking here? Don’t they know how to scrutinize?
This person has not only robbed his child of their childhood but has also tried to portray them as a demigod, which is ridiculous! He is the epitome of narcissism!

Thanks a ton for telling the truth. This boy is indeed talented for his age and could be advanced by 2–3 grades, but portraying him as a child prodigy is pure exaggeration. The Bari family is clearly fraudulent. Media should have the basic ability to scrutinize before bringing something to the public's attention.

@techgod360

Bangladeshi people didn't buy his fraudulence, so he decided to do the same in India now....

@SwapnilUtssaw

As a Bangladeshi I can definitely say his father is doing it to make him famous and earn some money using him...one of my university friend won IMO medal at 15...there are far more talented kids than him we don't know about

@divyansh3697

I saw one of his videos where he failed to solve a basic grade 11 problem(NEET physics) involving Bernoulli's Theorem. 
Each question is expected to be done in 2-3 min by any student giving the examination. 
He took 15-20 min, wrote a dimensionally incorrect formula, struggled and stared at it for many minutes, all the students and teachers were smiling. 
Yet the comment section was full of praise, people fail to realise how simple the question was atleast at the level he claims to be at.

@iftikar6751

issac once came to my town and i went to the stage and asked him a question about set theory (i was in 10th standard) and then i noticed that he does not have the basic knowledge of sets , he began to say something completely out of topic and as i highlighted him his mistakes , i could see him panicking. Even his father was being angry and told issac that i had memorized the meaning of a set. No doubt he is a bright child but this fear that his parents are building in him (the fear to answer something incorrectly) is just horrible

@amankaushik5833

His father alleged him as not just a prodigy but some demigod. Its ridiculous.

@alllove8104

"God Of Math" title for him is Just an insult for our great mathematicians..

@Zzz-9t

Bangladeshis are not giving him any attention so he has started thinking india as his home. And some indians are quite thrilled about it

@HellVolhard-u6q

Massive W for standing up for this kid man, parents shouldn't rob kids of their childhood, its just hideous, makes me sick to the core..... The kid looks very distressed.........Try to take this issue to the limelight or other news media outlets........

@murugan_singh

Last year, he came to my college in India. He was there to tell us about Refraction and other optical phenomena. In one problem he applied Thale's theorem/ Basic Proportionality Theorem but he didn't had a clue of it, he just kept on blabbering that this side is going to be half the length of the base without citing that he applied the aforementioned theorem. We even asked if he had applied that theorem but he didn't had the answer.

And there were so much such inconsistences with his delivery. These all points out to the fact that he was just regurgitating what his parents (or guardians) feed him. 

I don't have anything to do with him but with the connotations and attributions that his environment is subjecting him to. People are brazenly comparing him with Einstein and alike scientists which is, in my opinion, very problematic.

@nazifaanjumaumee3371

Bangladeshi here. From the get go I knew his father was behind all of it. Robbed him off of his childhood.

@antifascist-t7p

He was put into my General Relativity course a year or so ago and personally I'm not really convinced this kid is a prodigy. Yes sure it is impressive an 11 year old knows calculus but that's really it. It reminds of me of a quote from young sheldon "after a while people start asking if the dog who can play the piano is actually any good". In the general relativity courses, physics majors are already expected to have gotten a B or higher in E&M and multivariable calculus, differential equations and applied real analysis. You should enter the course understanding very basic things like what the Jacobian matrix is or how to solve Maxwell's Equations. Yet, in class Subborno was struggling with basic concepts that are prerequisites such how to solve a surface integral over a parametrized surface during the first 2 or 3 lectures that were meant to gauge the students' (mostly 3rd or 4th year undergrads) background ability. Eventually our prof. asked if anyone was willing to tutor Subborno. Frankly, he seems like he's gifted (maybe 2-3 grades above what is expected of him) but that's really it.

@dwellinginshadows

So glad that someone’s finally picking up on this. I’ve been getting this kid in my recommended nonstop lately, and it seems like only a handful of people know or care enough to call this out for what it is: a publicity stunt that could be considered a form of child abuse. 

Also, his success on YouTube and being known as a genius child prodigy really demonstrates how easy it is to fake it till you make it. He seems to parrot concepts with little to no understanding of them (which is to be expected), but the average lay person wouldn’t be able to see this. The channel also exaggerates how difficult the math/physics that he’s doing is, often calling it “PhD level”, when really it’s just lower level undergraduate topics. Again, though, this fools the average lay person.

@m0viefreaks

His father is a renowned con artist from Bangladesh

@SheikhAhmadShah

I don't think this kid's dad is psychologically sound, rather he can be sick. There are some videos where his dad is lashing out. I think social service should protect this child from the abusive father.

@ishathakor

i think his parents also don't particularly understand that entering into the workforce a few years early isn't actually going to have a positive long term impact on his life. one day this guy is going to be like 40 and he might be a successful 40 year old but he isn't going to be like, ready to retire just because he was a math prodigy. he's just going to be a 40 year old with a career like everyone else. prodigies don't really tend to maintain their exceptional level of skill. it's just a different learning curve where they are able to learn advanced stuff really quickly and then stay at that advanced level until they are at the age where their peers have caught up with them. when he's even just 30 he won't be some crazy child prodigy anymore. he'll just be a 30 year old with a math phd (if he gets one). which is impressive, sure, but there is no shortage of 30 year olds with phds.

it's like when a kid starts reading at age 3 or something and their parents get really excited. i did that and i was light years ahead of my peers till like 1st or 2nd grade. and then everyone else started reading chapter books too. and eventually even being a college level reader in 6th grade didn't matter anymore because i got older and went to college where everyone was reading at college level. at the end of the day you are only going to be a 10 year old for so long. one day you're going to be an adult interacting with other adults who've done all the same studying as you and the fact that it took them 10 years longer to get to that understanding of whatever subject you're amazing at will simply not matter anymore. there's a point of diminishing returns

@sadface7457

Child genius often over promises and under delivers. The remarkable thing about nobel prize winners is how ordinary they seem.