I can think of a few reasons you dont want to fly across the Antarctic.
One, flying in a straight line is not the shortest route and is why it appears flights are taking the long way around if your looking at a 2d map. Not sure how that works if the earth is flat.
Two, I imagine the winds are worse there, these are the coldest parts of the planet with some of the strongest winds on the planet, if I remember correctly.
Three, launching satellites into polar orbit is expensive and hard to maintain, I even noticed the poles seem to be the only spots not surrounded by musks 5g starlink. I wonder if this is because where the radiation is stronger its hard to keep electronics active, especially during something like a northern lights type of event. Anyway, you need straight line of site to satellites if you want to use gps for navigation.
Anyways, I learned with some simple trigonometry and algebra you can calculate the radius of the earth yourself. I dont think this experiment would work if the earth was really flat.
The FOIL method hahah, First Outside Inside Last. I used to crush that back in highschool, I barely remember any of it now :(. If you dont use it, you lose it, for sure.
the earth not flat...take your brain medicine, you know that kind that makes it so you don't believe ridiculous, retarded shit... if you're out, i have plenty
10 minutes of my life I would never get back. 1 minute used to respond here. No further response will be forthcoming
I like it
But haven't airplanes flown around the world and proved it was a ball? Or are those flight plans bogus?
Edit: This is the counter argument https://www.bitchute.com/video/a-7MvOn6fuY/
I can think of a few reasons you dont want to fly across the Antarctic.
One, flying in a straight line is not the shortest route and is why it appears flights are taking the long way around if your looking at a 2d map. Not sure how that works if the earth is flat.
Two, I imagine the winds are worse there, these are the coldest parts of the planet with some of the strongest winds on the planet, if I remember correctly.
https://www.amnh.org/learn-teach/curriculum-collections/antarctica/extreme-winds/katabatic-winds
Three, launching satellites into polar orbit is expensive and hard to maintain, I even noticed the poles seem to be the only spots not surrounded by musks 5g starlink. I wonder if this is because where the radiation is stronger its hard to keep electronics active, especially during something like a northern lights type of event. Anyway, you need straight line of site to satellites if you want to use gps for navigation.
Anyways, I learned with some simple trigonometry and algebra you can calculate the radius of the earth yourself. I dont think this experiment would work if the earth was really flat.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DamHd3MEgZY
The FOIL method hahah, First Outside Inside Last. I used to crush that back in highschool, I barely remember any of it now :(. If you dont use it, you lose it, for sure.
the earth not flat...take your brain medicine, you know that kind that makes it so you don't believe ridiculous, retarded shit... if you're out, i have plenty
On July 8, 95% of the earth’s landmass will be under the sun at the same time. How do you make that work on a ball?
Because it only works when the sun is furthest north from the equator, which is July 8.
My money's on hollow.