The effect of rotation is too small to be felt, but shows up in weather formations. But you are idiotic to say you don't feel the pull of gravity. What do you think is pressing you to the ground? What is your weight, other than the pull of gravity? Or do you avoid standing on scales because they are the devil's work? The Moon is not a flashlight; it reflects the sunlight. Notice the phases? And how they always face toward the Sun? Polaris moves very slowly; it hasn't been the only polar star, and even now another one is moving into position. All stars seem to rotate only because the Earth rotates, but the stars do not rotate. Take a ride on a merry-go-round to see the effect. The "curve" is not important, since one would see such a thing if we were on a phonograph record, but the important thing is that objects drop over the horizon when they travel far enough. Water bends all the time. Ever seen a water drop? Or the meniscus on a full glass of water? Ever see waves? But it conforms to the curvature of the Earth because the force of gravity is spherically symmetric. The seasons occur because the Earth is tilted and the northern and southern hemispheres alternately tilt towards or away from the Sun. The tropics are not affected by this tilting very much at all. With a tilt of 23.4 degrees (about half a radian) and a mean radius of 6378 km, the distance the pole moves from "upright" is plus or minus ~3000 km (or 1900 miles), not a trivial "few thousand feet." You really don't understand any of this, do you? The distance is not the issue, however. What is important is the angle at which the sunlight arrives at the Earth. The relative intensity goes as the sine of the elevation angle. During polar winter, the tilt is so severe, the Sun drops out of sight. During polar summer, the Sun is always in the sky. The tropics are thousands of miles from the poles, so you need to seriously recalibrate your understanding of geography. Your "eyes" don't know CGI from a Rorschach blot, as I have seen from the various examples presented to me. All the Moon landings have been real. Just because you don't want them to be real doesn't dispute the fact that they were real...and collected data, and left behind artifacts. (I recently saw a lunar photo that had good enough resolution, one could zoom in on the image of the left-behind landing stage of Apollo 11.)
Go to sleep, if you will. It is a wonder that you notice any difference between being asleep and being awake. You don't know the barest facts about this world and you think you can refute them in complete ignorance.
The effect of rotation is too small to be felt, but shows up in weather formations. But you are idiotic to say you don't feel the pull of gravity. What do you think is pressing you to the ground? What is your weight, other than the pull of gravity? Or do you avoid standing on scales because they are the devil's work? The Moon is not a flashlight; it reflects the sunlight. Notice the phases? And how they always face toward the Sun? Polaris moves very slowly; it hasn't been the only polar star, and even now another one is moving into position. All stars seem to rotate only because the Earth rotates, but the stars do not rotate. Take a ride on a merry-go-round to see the effect. The "curve" is not important, since one would see such a thing if we were on a phonograph record, but the important thing is that objects drop over the horizon when they travel far enough. Water bends all the time. Ever seen a water drop? Or the meniscus on a full glass of water? Ever see waves? But it conforms to the curvature of the Earth because the force of gravity is spherically symmetric. The seasons occur because the Earth is tilted and the northern hemispheres alternately tilt towards or away from the Sun. The tropics are not affected by this tilting very much at all. With a tilt of 23.4 degrees (about half a radian) and a mean radius of 6378 km, the distance the pole moves from "upright" is plus or minus ~3000 km (or 1900 miles), not a trivial "few thousand feet." You really don't understand any of this, do you? The distance is not the issue, however. What is important is the angle at which the sunlight arrives at the Earth. The relative intensity goes as the sine of the elevation angle. During polar winter, the tilt is so severe, the Sun drops out of sight. During polar summer, the Sun is always in the sky. The tropics are thousands of miles from the poles, so you need to seriously recalibrate your understanding of geography. Your "eyes" don't know CGI from a Rorschach blot, as I have seen from the various examples presented to me. All the Moon landings have been real. Just because you don't want them to be real doesn't dispute the fact that they were real...and collected data, and left behind artifacts. (I recently saw a lunar photo that had good enough resolution, one could zoom in on the image of the left-behind landing stage of Apollo 11.)
Go to sleep, if you will. It is a wonder that you notice any difference between being asleep and being awake. You don't know the barest facts about this world and you think you can refute them in complete ignorance.