Whenever I bring up flat earth, people immediately try and shut it down, sometimes really aggressively. I think NASA has hidden something and people are afraid to confront the truth and put in the hard work to dig down and find it.
No. It is because it is conspicuously untrue. Your credibility takes an instant and irreversible nosedive, and you rub this off on your fellow travelers. NASA has hidden nothing (knowledge of the round Earth predates NASA by several centuries) and it is classic paranoia to get lost in doubt over this. Read more geophysics, if you must.
I don't know for sure if the earth is flat or not (we really can't know for sure), but I like to bring it up to see if people are open minded and willing to challenge the status quo. The elites win when people just believe what they read without asking questions. People get uncomfortable when I bring up flat earth, just like they get uncomfortable when I remind them that Trump was right or that babies are being murdered, both before and after they are born. They don't want to face the truth. The redpill isn't a one time thing, but something you have to take everyday if you want to really see how deep the rabbit hole goes.
We already know for sure. Magellan went around it. Ever since then we have been going around it by sea, by air, and by orbit. We have taken pictures from space. The land cannot be mapped over large distances as a flat surface (it is spherically convex). What is there to be "open" to? Ignorance?
The elites win when people begin to question their own eyes and ears and other people...but not their ignorant skeptical dogma.
I ask plenty of questions. And then I get the answer and there is no more doubt. Only an infant asks questions incessantly and never is satisfied with an answer. You cannot take pride in asking questions if you ignore the answers that are obvious all around you.
That all makes sense, but I've seen too much over the past few years to trust it anymore. I've found the people who are most vocally opposed to flat earth are the same "follow the science crowd" who think the vaccine is actually helping people or that the 2020 election was anything close to being legitimate. It seems suspicious to me how much the globe theory is pushed and crammed down our throats throughout all grades of school. There is definitely an agenda there. When I realized how easily people can be brainwashed to believe the most ridiculous things, I realized I can't trust others and have to look into the important things for myself.
Whenever I bring up flat earth, people immediately try and shut it down, sometimes really aggressively. I think NASA has hidden something and people are afraid to confront the truth and put in the hard work to dig down and find it.
No. It is because it is conspicuously untrue. Your credibility takes an instant and irreversible nosedive, and you rub this off on your fellow travelers. NASA has hidden nothing (knowledge of the round Earth predates NASA by several centuries) and it is classic paranoia to get lost in doubt over this. Read more geophysics, if you must.
I don't know for sure if the earth is flat or not (we really can't know for sure), but I like to bring it up to see if people are open minded and willing to challenge the status quo. The elites win when people just believe what they read without asking questions. People get uncomfortable when I bring up flat earth, just like they get uncomfortable when I remind them that Trump was right or that babies are being murdered, both before and after they are born. They don't want to face the truth. The redpill isn't a one time thing, but something you have to take everyday if you want to really see how deep the rabbit hole goes.
Are you afraid to ask questions?
We already know for sure. Magellan went around it. Ever since then we have been going around it by sea, by air, and by orbit. We have taken pictures from space. The land cannot be mapped over large distances as a flat surface (it is spherically convex). What is there to be "open" to? Ignorance?
The elites win when people begin to question their own eyes and ears and other people...but not their ignorant skeptical dogma.
I ask plenty of questions. And then I get the answer and there is no more doubt. Only an infant asks questions incessantly and never is satisfied with an answer. You cannot take pride in asking questions if you ignore the answers that are obvious all around you.
That all makes sense, but I've seen too much over the past few years to trust it anymore. I've found the people who are most vocally opposed to flat earth are the same "follow the science crowd" who think the vaccine is actually helping people or that the 2020 election was anything close to being legitimate. It seems suspicious to me how much the globe theory is pushed and crammed down our throats throughout all grades of school. There is definitely an agenda there. When I realized how easily people can be brainwashed to believe the most ridiculous things, I realized I can't trust others and have to look into the important things for myself.