Watch the video. As far as you can tell, all you see is a light in the sky and you don't know it's speed, altitude, size or shape. The video shows helium balloon satellites, and solar powered drones, and high altitude planes. In addition living on a flat earth with a solid firmament, would explain why you can bounce radio waves from USA to Australia (impossible on a sphere). Also a firmament would explain technology like project bluebeam where you can project images in the sky. Sightings of the ISS from amateur telescopes look oddly holographic. The line of satellites everyone thinks is starlink could be any of these options.
Again, every picture I've seen (of the ISS from earth) looks like a projection to me. I think its the result of 'project bluebeam'. And if we indeed have a firmament, this would mean we have a solid surface in the sky that could be projected on to. However, I dont believe the ISS is orbiting in space because of the sheer number of green screen, cgi, and harness fails they have had filming inside or on 'spacewalks'. Also I can barely see a jumbo jet 7 miles high with the naked eye, the ISS is about the same size, how would I see it 250 miles high?
Why do you believe the ISS is real, and orbiting the earth 250 miles high every 90 minutes?
That's amazing, you can look in the night sky and tell the size, speed, trajectory, and features of any object up there. Wow it's like your brain and eyes are a military targeting system. Incredible
Kaaarrll, how do you know the size, speed, and altitude of the object you are looking at in the night sky? Did you go up to the ISS in a shuttle and clock it's speed?
What's keeping them up in the sky?
Gravity.
Care to elaborate? Gravite acting in which direction?
no, gravity doesn't exist
You don't exist. You are nothing. You are a loser. You are pathetic. You are dumb as a rock.
Watch the video. As far as you can tell, all you see is a light in the sky and you don't know it's speed, altitude, size or shape. The video shows helium balloon satellites, and solar powered drones, and high altitude planes. In addition living on a flat earth with a solid firmament, would explain why you can bounce radio waves from USA to Australia (impossible on a sphere). Also a firmament would explain technology like project bluebeam where you can project images in the sky. Sightings of the ISS from amateur telescopes look oddly holographic. The line of satellites everyone thinks is starlink could be any of these options.
You can literally see the ISS with a strong enough telescope and make out it's shape and components.
Explain that.
Again, every picture I've seen (of the ISS from earth) looks like a projection to me. I think its the result of 'project bluebeam'. And if we indeed have a firmament, this would mean we have a solid surface in the sky that could be projected on to. However, I dont believe the ISS is orbiting in space because of the sheer number of green screen, cgi, and harness fails they have had filming inside or on 'spacewalks'. Also I can barely see a jumbo jet 7 miles high with the naked eye, the ISS is about the same size, how would I see it 250 miles high?
Why do you believe the ISS is real, and orbiting the earth 250 miles high every 90 minutes?
So you think the firmament is a giant digital screen?
No, YOU don't know because you're a fucking idiot. The rest of the world knows ya fucking loser.
Just because you are an idiot, does not make the rest of the world one too. You live in a fantasy camp for idiots.
Kill yourself now.
That's amazing, you can look in the night sky and tell the size, speed, trajectory, and features of any object up there. Wow it's like your brain and eyes are a military targeting system. Incredible
they are balloons, so air
The ISS is moving at 7.6km per second.
How is a balloon doing that?
Kaaarrll, how do you know the size, speed, and altitude of the object you are looking at in the night sky? Did you go up to the ISS in a shuttle and clock it's speed?
https://www.wired.com/story/measure-the-speed-of-the-iss-with-your-iphone/
Here you go. Find a flaw please.