In all flat Earth illustrations that I have seen, there is a distinct map of a moon. The flat Earth explenations for the moon range from the moon being an object in the sky orbiting like the sun to the Moon being a "reflection" if the sun, but none of the explenations account for one important detail.
The Moon always has the same side facing us, which is usually explained by the Moon being tidally locked to the Earth, but I have never seen a flat Earth explenation for this. Because of solar eclipses it is obvious that the moon is closer then the sun, which suggests that it's <1,000 miles away instead of the generally accepted 200,000+ miles away, but if the moon was that close you would be able to see the moon from different angles depending on where you are on Earth, but lunar parallax is a very small effect that agrees with the moon being 200,000+ miles away.
Flat earthers, please explain.