Saturday, August 27, 2016

The Flat Earth Model


source: Flat Earth Society
Contrary to what you have been told, the earth is flat.

It is not "a ball" or "a globe" or "an oblate spheroid".

It is a flat circle, like a big pie plate.

It is not spinning on its axis or orbiting around the sun.

It is still. It is motionless.The sun moves but the earth does not.

You may ask how I know this. I know this because I saw it on YouTube.

What we call the North Pole is at the center -- the middle of the pie. What we call Antarctica is a wall of ice surrounding the ocean -- the outer rim of the pie plate. What we know as the South Pole is a myth.

What we call the Northern Hemisphere fits in a relatively small circle in the middle of the pie. The perimeter of this circle is what we call the equator.

What we call the Southern Hemisphere is a larger ring around the smaller circle. The inside edge of this ring is the so-called equator; the outside edge is what we call Antarctica.

The imaginary lines that we call longitude radiate outward from the center of the pie to the outer edge. These lines meet only once: at the so-called North Pole.

They do not curve around and meet again, as shown on a globe. And even if they did, they couldn't meet at the South Pole. On the flat earth, there is no South Pole.

The imaginary lines that we call latitude run in concentric circles around the so-called North Pole. Circles smaller than the equator are called North latitude. Circles larger than the equator are called South latitude.

The sun is not, as you have been told, 93 million miles away. It is only about 3000 miles above the earth.

The sun moves in circles of varying sizes. The variations in size account for the seasons.

In the so-called Northern Hemisphere's spring and summer, the sun moves in circles smaller than the so-called equator. The sun's circle is smallest at the Summer Solstice, after which the circles begin to get larger.

In the so-called Northern Hemisphere's fall and winter, the sun moves in circles larger than the so-called equator. The sun's circle is largest at the Winter Solstice, after which the circles begin to get smaller.

The sun's circles never get small enough to melt all the ice at the so-called North Pole, or large enough to melt the ice that surrounds the ocean. This explains why there is a small frozen area in the middle and a large frozen area around the edge.

The sun completes one circle every 24 hours, accounting for day and night.

The light of the sun is not powerful enough to travel very far, so when the sun's movement takes it far away from you, you experience night. When the sun comes close enough so that its light can reach you again, you experience day. And so on.

This may strike you as utter nonsense, but many people believe it.

If you look around YouTube, you will find hundreds (or thousands) of hours of videos made by people who believe all this and much more.

They are now dedicated to spreading the word, freeing humanity from the shackles of its false belief that the earth is a spinning ball.

Or so they say.