Gas has mass. There's no reason gravity should have no effect on it.
So you're saying that a force of 9.8m/s², a force so weak that a bug can fly against it, is strong enough to hold off an infinite vacuum? Do I have that right?
What happens when the bug stops flying? Wonder if that happens to things that aren't a bug too. "Things go up, so gravity not real" is a pretty braindead take. This whole thing would be more interesting if flat earthers had a coherent physics model, but you never have and never will.
hold off an infinite vacuum
You don't need to "hold off" a vacuum. It's not exerting force on anything. It helps to have some understanding of what you're trying to argue against.
Do things move if no force is being exerted on them?
So you're saying that a force of 9.8m/s², a force so weak that a bug can fly against it, is strong enough to hold off an infinite vacuum? Do I have that right?
You have no grasp of physics at all.
That's not a measurement of force. Try again
What happens when the bug stops flying? Wonder if that happens to things that aren't a bug too. "Things go up, so gravity not real" is a pretty braindead take. This whole thing would be more interesting if flat earthers had a coherent physics model, but you never have and never will.
You don't need to "hold off" a vacuum. It's not exerting force on anything. It helps to have some understanding of what you're trying to argue against.
Do things move if no force is being exerted on them?
Ah so I guess you’re just gonna ignore the point. Alright.
I addressed everything you said. Tell me what I ignored.
The point is it makes absolutely no sense for an infinite vacuum to not suck all of the air off of earth.