Too tired to do proper quotes, but you'll know which Qs I'm referring to.
1. The analogy of a water drop to a spherical earth as the "natural" shape does not hold. Water droplets, or any liquid, has a natural shape of a sphere because of surface tension. Surface tension ensures that the lowest energy form is a sphere. Gravity would indeed assure a lowest energy state of a sphere, but FEers tend to not believe in gravity. If gravity does indeed exist, then a spherical earth is almost necessitated. Unfortunately, the tendency of FEers to have a combination of disbelief in both gravity and the basic laws of physics (or at least a denial of what the outcome would be) ensures that they don't realize that they can't believe in both gravity and a flat earth.
(and in response to Waste of Mind: What ways are the Earth special? I don't see the Earth as special at all. The earth is made of matter, just like the rest of the universe. The Earth has no special properties except that we are on it, and that in itself cannot be used as evidence that the Earth is special, because ANY race would conclude that the body they were on was special.)
2. You're absolutely right. The only way that FEers can explain away the "horizon" effects observed on large bodies of water is by inventing the utterly ridiculous theories like "bendy light" (the product of some overactive imaginations reading about general relativity), or "perspective" illusions. I have yet to have a perspective illusion demonstrated to me that tricks my eyes into observing the results of curvature on a flat surface.
3. The Ice Wall, along with the Shadow Object, is one of the most ridiculous parts of the FET. It is obvious that the Ice Wall could not possibly be effectively guarded by men, nor by realistic application of modern technology. But of course, the Conspiracy has endless technology hidden away that they can use to guard the Wall. And FEers have never developed a well-rounded theory regarding the height of the wall, or the ways that the Wall could be concealed from normal observation.
From my time on the forum so far, it is clear to me that in order for FET to be plausible, you must accept:
- existence of a Conspiracy (an absolute necessity)
- total rejection of gravity, including both Newtonian and Einsteinian (again, absolute necessity)
- rejection of theories of electromagnetic propagation (light) (not as important, but eliminates most counter-arguments)
If you don't keep these in mind, you'll run into trouble trying to make sense of most of FET.