Your first point makes sense. But daylight being the same among time zones has no real math behind it, and the daylight per zone would only be relatively similar either way.
The way I see it, it's as though the orbit is on a higher orbital plane. Which makes sense if we are on a habitable zone of a massive stationary planetoid, rotating only once per year. Which also explains how the nights sky is only one view. As we are always looking up at the same sky and never in distinct directions during the seasons. This fits in with crater earth theory.
Your first point makes sense. But daylight being the same among time zones has no real math behind it, and the daylight per zone would only be relatively similar either way.
The way I see it, it's as though the orbit is on a higher orbital plane. Which makes sense if we are on a habitable zone of a massive stationary planetoid. Which also explains how the nights sky is only one view. As we are always looking up at the same sky and never in distinct directions during the seasons. This fits in with crater earth theory.