explain gravity
Gravitation is a natural phenomenon by which all objects with mass attract each other, and is one of the fundamental forces of physics. In everyday life, gravitation is most commonly thought of as the agency that gives objects weight. It is responsible for keeping the Earth and the other planets in their orbits around the Sun; for keeping the Moon in its orbit around the Earth, for the formation of tides; for convection (by which hot fluids rise); for heating the interiors of forming stars and planets to very high temperatures; and for various other phenomena that we observe. Gravitation is also the reason for the very existence of the Earth, the Sun, and most macroscopic objects in the universe; without it, matter would not have coalesced into these large masses and life, as we know it, would not exist.
With your crazy 'earth accelerates upwards' theory, then how on earth can you drop something and it gets faster the longer it is dropping? If we believed in gravity, then the reason would be that "the gravitational pull on earth is of 9 metres per second per second. This acceleration explains how things get faster as gravitation pulls them towards earth, thus rendering more force (ie something dropped from 10m compared to something dropped at 100m)."
So...does this mean that the earth is getting faster? Because I read somewhere that the earth was not getting faster...and if the earth was getting faster then it would not be able to sustain life after a period of time, as the force would generate a severe deterioration. We would be crushed.
And still, nobody can come up with 'solid' evidence to prove the earth is flat. There is plenty for a RE...
Cheers,
=PS