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.
Sure in the sky. Not in space
What's keeping them up in the sky?
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.