> There's also a huge issue with your use of the word subjective - math is objective. Proofs remain stable whether it's humans or any other system that does the processing. We test that objectivity by comparing the subjective readings from individual humans, and if the tests all return the same results, we can confidently say that the resulting proof is an objective fact about reality. Subjective fundamentally means that depending on the subject, the reading might change. Modern systems of math are formally, provably objective.
You are of course free to believe in mathematical Platonism, but that doesn't mean that non-Platonists would agree that proofs amount to objective "facts" about reality. And you are equally free to "prove it for yourself", which will just end up begging the question unless you are a Platonist.
That's not to say that math is subjective. But claiming that math is producing objective facts ignores at least a few hundred years of philosophy of mathematics (if not more). Even practicing mathematicians like Chaitin have described math as being more about inventing than discovering.
Holding a non-Platonist position also doesn't immediately lead to the sort of constructivist / "anything goes" position that some people ascribe to it, where you'd suddenly lose the ability to say that 2 + 2 = 4 and not 5. There are lots of philosophical positions that would agree that 2 + 2 is 4 without also claiming that this makes it a "fact" about any sort of objective reality or Platonic discovery.