Exactly. And sorry, but it is physically impossible for a laser pointer to hit its target 100 miles away on a globe. Given that my only sources of confirmation that the earth is a globe are pictures from NASA, and that those pictures are WILDLY inconsistent one to the next (continent sizes vary greatly), and the fact NASA has even told us outright they are all composite photos, and given their long history of lies and fakery, and given that we now KNOW the depth of the lies we are fed about just about every topic imaginable is seemingly bottomless….I think it is literal insanity at this point to not at least question what this place actually IS that we are living on. Is it a pancake? A plate? An infinite or unimaginably massive plane? I can’t say because I can’t know. Is it a ball? Nah. I REALLY don’t believe it is.
Do you find it interesting that you can predict the rise and set of the sun and moon? Or that you can predict a solar or lunar eclipse?
If things seemed at random, i would think somethings weird. That would cause me to question globe theory. If anyone had developed a model for the flat earth that could explain seasons and eclipses and star rotation below the equator, Id love to hear it.
This isn’t a topic that I’ve delved into in a long while. I’ve seen plausible explanations for the above examples but hell if I remember what they are. What got me really thinking was seeing things that physically and scientifically should be impossible on a globe. Just going from memory here (and I don’t remember the numbers in miles or the math that dictates how much distance visibility is lost to the curve, sorry)…With powerful enough magnification, boats are visible many miles from shore, long past the point of disappearing behind the curve. Placing lasers and boards on opposite sides of a large Lake many miles apart (I’m thinking it was something like 30-50 miles apart - a very large distance at any), and hitting the targets precisely (lasers don’t follow curves). So there’s a couple easy experiments you can do yourself to test the theory. Other examples were using powerful magnification to seeing cities and mountain ranges hundreds of miles away. Not possible on a globe. I’m sure the video posted in the OP goes into much greater depth and detail.
Is this satire or are accounts devolving to handshakes
Exactly. And sorry, but it is physically impossible for a laser pointer to hit its target 100 miles away on a globe. Given that my only sources of confirmation that the earth is a globe are pictures from NASA, and that those pictures are WILDLY inconsistent one to the next (continent sizes vary greatly), and the fact NASA has even told us outright they are all composite photos, and given their long history of lies and fakery, and given that we now KNOW the depth of the lies we are fed about just about every topic imaginable is seemingly bottomless….I think it is literal insanity at this point to not at least question what this place actually IS that we are living on. Is it a pancake? A plate? An infinite or unimaginably massive plane? I can’t say because I can’t know. Is it a ball? Nah. I REALLY don’t believe it is.
Do you find it interesting that you can predict the rise and set of the sun and moon? Or that you can predict a solar or lunar eclipse?
If things seemed at random, i would think somethings weird. That would cause me to question globe theory. If anyone had developed a model for the flat earth that could explain seasons and eclipses and star rotation below the equator, Id love to hear it.
Any experiments I could do to support flat earth?
This isn’t a topic that I’ve delved into in a long while. I’ve seen plausible explanations for the above examples but hell if I remember what they are. What got me really thinking was seeing things that physically and scientifically should be impossible on a globe. Just going from memory here (and I don’t remember the numbers in miles or the math that dictates how much distance visibility is lost to the curve, sorry)…With powerful enough magnification, boats are visible many miles from shore, long past the point of disappearing behind the curve. Placing lasers and boards on opposite sides of a large Lake many miles apart (I’m thinking it was something like 30-50 miles apart - a very large distance at any), and hitting the targets precisely (lasers don’t follow curves). So there’s a couple easy experiments you can do yourself to test the theory. Other examples were using powerful magnification to seeing cities and mountain ranges hundreds of miles away. Not possible on a globe. I’m sure the video posted in the OP goes into much greater depth and detail.