There are flat earther's that live in places with buildings tall enough to see the Earth's curvature. Chicago has the Sears Tower ( no one calls it the Willis building), BYE has the Empire State building.
When I was little road trips were a thing, and I'm absolutely sure there are building all over the US where you can go up, and see the curve.
Chicago's skyline is a famous flat earth proof. The skyline can be viewed when their visibility is clear enough from across the lake at over 60 miles. At this distance the sears tower should be 100s of feet below the horizon (check it with an earth curve calculator). Yet the entire skyline can be seen, not just the sears tower.
Truthiracy3 proved your example wrong years ago. It's one of the reason the flagged him off of YouTube. He wasn't very nice about it either. It's very memorable.
Lol, do the math yourself or use an earth curve calculator, it's very simple. Chicago being seen from 60+ miles across the lake isn't exactly a rare sight, though it only occurs on days with very high visibility.
Highschool physics prove the earth is a sphere. If you don't believe me buy some plane tickets and travel.
There are flat earther's that live in places with buildings tall enough to see the Earth's curvature. Chicago has the Sears Tower ( no one calls it the Willis building), BYE has the Empire State building.
When I was little road trips were a thing, and I'm absolutely sure there are building all over the US where you can go up, and see the curve.
Chicago's skyline is a famous flat earth proof. The skyline can be viewed when their visibility is clear enough from across the lake at over 60 miles. At this distance the sears tower should be 100s of feet below the horizon (check it with an earth curve calculator). Yet the entire skyline can be seen, not just the sears tower.
Truthiracy3 proved your example wrong years ago. It's one of the reason the flagged him off of YouTube. He wasn't very nice about it either. It's very memorable.
Lol, do the math yourself or use an earth curve calculator, it's very simple. Chicago being seen from 60+ miles across the lake isn't exactly a rare sight, though it only occurs on days with very high visibility.