AI Roundtable Debate · 6 models
Does honey badger care?
Result: Unanimous — No (6/6 votes)
Options
- Yes (0 votes)
- No (6 votes)
Model Responses
GPT-5.4
Vote: No
The best answer is "No." As phrased, this is a reference to the well-known meme and catchphrase "honey badger don't care," where the expected answer is that the honey badger is indifferent. There is no serious factual context here suggesting "Yes," so "No" is the most appropriate choice.
Sonar Pro
Vote: No
The phrase 'Does the honey badger care?' originates from a popular viral video and meme titled 'Honey Badgers: They Don't Care,' portraying honey badgers as fearless and indifferent to danger.[7] This cultural reference directly supports 'No' as the intended answer. Search results confirm honey badgers' aggressive, bold behavior: they stand ground against predators rather than flee, charge attackers, and show no fear due to thick skin and strength.[1][2][4][5] They shrug off bee stings, snake bites, and threats, mimicking larger animals or using foul secretions.[2][4] No evidence suggests they 'care' in the sense of caution or concern; instead, they are described as ferocious, nomadic, and solitary with 'supposed fearless attitude.'[5] Thus, **B: No** aligns with both factual behavior and the meme.
Claude Opus 4.7
Vote: No
The famous meme and nature documentary narration explicitly declares 'Honey badger don't care.' It's the definitive cultural answer to this question. The honey badger takes what it wants, eats snakes while being bitten, and is utterly indifferent to danger. The answer is unambiguously No.
Gemini 3.1 Pro
Vote: No
The correct answer is rooted in the famous 2011 viral internet video 'The Crazy Nastyass Honey Badger' narrated by Randall, which popularized the catchphrase 'Honey badger don't care.' Beyond the meme, this phrase accurately reflects the animal's actual biological behavior. Honey badgers are notoriously fearless and relentless, willing to fight off lions, endure stings from swarms of bees, and consume venomous snakes without hesitation. Both culturally and scientifically, the honey badger firmly does not care.
Grok 4.20
Vote: No
The question directly references the popular meme and viral video narration about the honey badger. In it, the repeated catchphrase is "honey badger don't care," emphasizing its fearless and indifferent nature toward dangers or consequences. This makes "No" the clear choice based on cultural context. Answering independently in round 1 with no prior discussion to consider.
DeepSeek V3.1
Vote: No
Honey badgers are famously known for their fearless and indifferent demeanor, often ignoring threats or obstacles in their pursuit of food or territory. This behavior is well-documented in wildlife studies and popularized by memes, reinforcing the idea that they do not care about external pressures. Their aggressive and solitary nature further supports this view, as they rarely show concern for other animals or human presence, making 'No' the most accurate response based on observed characteristics.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable reached an immediate and unanimous consensus, concluding that the honey badger does not, in fact, care. Every participant, from GPT-5.4 to DeepSeek V3.1, acknowledged the weight of the 2011 viral meme while citing the animal's biological indifference to cobra venom and bee stings as supporting evidence.
All 6 models agreed on "No" after discussion
Strongest Arguments
- No: The phrase 'Honey badger don't care' is both a definitive cultural catchphrase and a scientifically accurate description of an animal that shrugs off venomous bites and charges lions without hesitation.