Due to our physics, toroids are very common in the universe because spinning clouds tend to coalesce into discs like the Solar System or the Milky Way. Anything too close to the center of mass tends to get pulled in, everything else orbits and becomes part of the doughnut of stuff orbiting the center of mass. Why spinning spheres collapse into discs is not real clear to me but has to do with conservation of angular momentum. Stuff orbiting above and below the plane defined by the axis of rotation tends to disappear over the long term. It's kind of like how the poles of the Earth are squashed down towards the center while the equator bulges.
As I've said before, the LCDM model (which this video is about) has some serious problems which they hand-wave away with made-up, unobserved things like dark matter and dark energy. There are competing theories now like modified Newtonian dynamics and the timescape model which do not require the existence of dark matter or dark energy to accurately predict galaxy movements.
There clearly are aspects of physics which are not symmetrical and it is not understood why, so I am not surprised there is not equal distribution of whatever that video is talking about. For example it is not known why there is virtually no antimatter and everything is matter, when there should be equal amounts of both.
As I've said before, the LCDM model (which this video is about) has some serious problems which they hand-wave away with made-up, unobserved things like dark matter and dark energy. There are competing theories now like modified Newtonian dynamics and the timescape model which do not require the existence of dark matter or dark energy to accurately predict galaxy movements.
There clearly are aspects of physics which are not symmetrical and it is not understood why, so I am not surprised there is not equal distribution of whatever that video is talking about. For example it is not known why there is virtually no antimatter and everything is matter, when there should be equal amounts of both.

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