Initially I rolled my eyes at all of your posts.
Curiously, I didn't see people disputing your points... just saying stuff like "it's a sphere and that's just a fact." It seemed like a cop out to make such statements on a conspiracy forum.
Still, the brainwashing was so deeply ingrained that I still ignored what you were posting. I assumed flat earth was just a psyop to discredit actual legit conspiracies.
Then I learned about the moon landing, the Mars missions, the ISS footage, and everything else.
Furthermore, it seemed strange that flat earth was mocked to the same degree as the moon landing was. And the moon landing is a real conspiracy...
So I watched an interview that you posted in one of your threads out of curiosity.
And the guy made some good points.
So I started looking into it more.
Fast forward a couple weeks and I've come to the conclusion that AS WE PERCEIVE IT AS INHABITANTS OF THE PLANET, the earth is undoubtedly flat.
I don't pretend to have the full picture but you've indirectly convinced me.
This is the final red pill, you're right. And it links into esoteric knowledge perfectly.
Like always, the truth is so blatant once you start looking into it that it's borderline insulting.
Thanks for posting.
I think I can take a break from conspiracies for a while after this one.
If the Earth was flat you would always see the sun. Go ahead make a model with a GoPro camera and a big circle on the floor and a light bulb. Try to make the light disappear and duplicate the observed data that we see for the time and heading of the sunrise for any position on Earth.
Science is not done by watching YouTube videos from people trying to sell you books. If you can set up an experiment that is always superior to questionable data from an unknown source. If your experiment fails then it means your theory is wrong.
Perspective and distance. If the earth was round, you would not see the big dipper in Australia, but they can on the north half.
If the Earth was flet, the people on the southern area of Australia would be able to see the big dipper with a telescopic lens.