@SabeloMothusi @Karmakamasutra Indeed, if you can see a 6 metre structure from 4 km away, or a 60 metre structure from 40 km away, then on a flat earth you would be able to see a 6000 metre structure from 4000 km away. All occupy the same angle. Kilimanjaro would be an easy spot from the top of Table Mountain.
@bg_anon You seem to have gone out of your way to produce the most unclear imges possible.
Do it again with a light coloured larger ball so it is easier to see the shadow. Film the ball from further away so you can use the zoom to increase the size of the moon, improving clarity.
Gotta love firmware updates that take more than 8 hours to download, install, and then sort out the bits that didn't work. And still no bloody audio after all that!
@SusieBowman1979 @PubPlymouth When you are above any place on earth, the earth is simply below. Why would you want to align the camera with the north and south pole? You'd take the picture such that the direction down towards the centre of the earth is at the bottom of the image.
@edmundsnick @MichaelAbberton @BreesAnna CoViD is currently killing at least 4% of those who contract it, and leaving at least that number again with life long after effects. Contrast with the winter 'flu which kills less than 0.1% of those who contract it.
@SusieBowman1979 @PubPlymouth After researching flat earth, anyone with a working brain can see that every claim made is complete bollocks. It's a bunch of lies, misinformation and misdirection promoted by con merchants looking for clicks, ad revenue, donations and merch sales.
@SLATFascists @talkRADIO Why are these morons given airtime? They are just con merchants telling outright lies for clicks, ad revenue, donations and merch sales.
@x33report @vendetta_miga It completely matches observed reality, in both hemispheres.
The sky confirms the Earth rotates on its axis once every 23h 56m 04s and orbits the Sun once every 365.256 days and has an axial tilt of 23.5°. These are measured and measurable facts.
@x33report @vendetta_miga Two rotation points.
One is directly above the North Pole, the other is directly above the South Pole.
Everyone looking north sees rotation around the northern celestial rotation point.
Everyone looking south sees rotation around the southern celestial rotation point.
Globe
@x33report @vendetta_miga Nope.
From equator, look north they go anti-clockwise, look south they go clockwise.
At the North pole, they move left to right with the rotation point directly overhead.
At the South pole, they move right to left with the rotation point directly overhead.
It's a globe.