I get it man, I've been where you're at. Not trying to condescend, just saying I understand how you think it all adds up. Again, me from a year ago would be on your side, and think "this picman is off his rocker".
It's pretty fucking cool when you realize we're not on a spinning ball in an endless night.
It sparks the explorer in you because the lands are ever changing, and there is more that lies beyond the ice wall. With baal earth, you're stuck on this planet. Everything's been explored already. Might as well stay where you're at.
Also, I'm still waiting on that photograph of the sun in the visible light spectrum from space. We've got thousands of satellites "orbiting" earth, dozens of them are super special space telescopes. No photos of the sun. We have stations built on earth to monitor the sun. No photos in the visible light spectrum. Only stuff through filters so you can see ionized helium, iron, and whatever else.
If it were how they tell us it is, why are there zero pictures of the sun in the visible light spectrum taken from space? No one from the ISS ever took their smartphone and took a picture out the window? Not a single damn person?
Tell me with a straight face that it makes sense.
If it were how they tell us it is, why are there zero pictures of the sun in the visible light spectrum taken from space? No one from the ISS ever took their smartphone and took a picture out the window? Not a single damn person?
There are videos from the ISS where the sun shows up, but without the earth atmosphere, it is too fucking bright for the visible light sensors (and only appears as a bright white spot).
heard of filters?
In a pinch, slap about 20 sunglasses in front of that bad boy and then take the picture.
If it were what they tell us, they would have billions of pictures of the sun with every filter imaginable in the visible light spectrum. Why is it so difficult to find just one?
Think about it :)
https://solar.physics.montana.edu/ypop/Spotlight/Today/visible.html
It's too bright, so when you filter it down, you just get a grey ball.
I am definitely a globe earth skeptic, but one day I woke up early and went to the beach of the Atlantic Ocean to see the sun rise. And later that day I took a drive across the state of Florida to the beach on the gulf side to watch the sunset. The way the sun appeared and disappeared beyond the horizon looked to match the globetard theory. So what is going on there.
Genuinely interested, not trying to "get" you.
the sun only looks like it's setting because it gets too far away.
Imagine what a large plane would look like if it flew directly over your head and continued flying straight. It would look like that plane came up from the horizon behind you, zipped over, and then set in front.
One could put together a 3D simulation of a large sphere moving overhead and it would look like the sun was setting as it disappeared over the horizon, even though it continued moving in a straight line.
The globe earth theory "makes sense" to people because it's all we've ever been told. And it fits enough to seem plausible.
Hmmm I guess I'll take a closer look next time I see a plane. 🤔 thanks tho
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