Do you (U/ghost_of_aswartz) still believe we went to the Moon?
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Wasn't the Orion mission about sending a rocket through the belts, with measuring equipment to test and measure the radiation exposure on the rocket? And to see how much time it took to travel through the belts? NASA's own admission to having never sent a human through those belts. Hence no moon mission was ever real.
If you have a fish in a fishbowl and you move the bowl, does the fish immediately slam into the side of the bowl? No, the water generally moves with the rest of the bowl. Air is a fluid like water, it's just a lot more compressible. The air is rotating the same speed as the ground more or less.
The whole reason something can fly through the air is because the air is resisting its natural tendency to fall due to gravity.
An object in motion stays in motion. If the ground is rotating in space, an object on the ground will be rotating similarly. Even if the object moves away from the ground a bit, it's still largely rotating similarly. Without anything pushing on an object, it moves in a straight line. Without gravity, objects would naturally fling off into space. Gravity curves space, though, so that the straight line naturally leads back to colliding with the ground (unless you're going fast enough to be in orbit.)
It doesn't take power to keep moving or rotating. It only takes power to accelerate or decelerate.
You can measure the rotation of the Earth using a gyroscope or a pendulum. Pretty much every science museum has a demonstration of Foucault's pendulum.
If you move the fishbowl in a circular motion with a period of 24 hours, then the fish won't even be able to perceive the motion, even if the radius of the circle is thousands of miles. If you whip it around in a tight loop, then the water will become turbulent and the fish will get knocked around.
If there's a current, the fish will move with it. Depending on its swimming ability, it will be able to swim against some amount of current. What analogy are you trying to make? Is it a controversial idea that a fish can swim?
Air is comprised of matter in a gaseous state. There is air in space in that there's particles of matter all over the place, but at a low enough density that it's basically a vacuum. That's not my theory, that's a non-controversial description of nature based on hundreds of years of empirically tested science.
If you don't believe in matter, then I'm curious what you believe air is comprised of.
Hence no
moonmission was ever real.Hence no SPACE mission was ever real.
The mission has always been for your mind.
Exactly.
Why one can find a fly on a recent rover photo. Oh the fuckery of it all.