Photographs are not admissible as evidence on this forum.
Here is a picture of Naboo.
Well, I guess that settles it. Looks like Tom says your doctored photo of Toronto is inadmissible. Sorry, levee.
Back in 2007, nobody actually did the research needed to come up with professional and amateur photographs which show, very clearly, that there is no curvature at the surface of the Earth; certainly I will use videos and the art of photography to destroy the most ludicrous, preposterous, and most laughable of all possible hoaxes: the round earth theory.
Your wish is my command: here are the photographs over the English Channel, just for you...
And now, the photograph taken in England, Langdon cliffs (100 meters maximum height), absolutely no curvature all the way to France; remember that from a height of 90.6 meters you could barely see an object of no height (water near the shoreline):

Full view of the French coastline, top to bottom, no curvature.
Cap Gris Nez beach, no curvature at all all the way to England:

To satisfy your lust for the round earth theory, you have been given a more than generous choice of heights:
h = 3 m BD = 60.6
h = 5 m BD = 53
h = 10m BD = 40.4
h = 20m BD = 25.5
Even if we go to 20 meters, we still see the entirety of the cliffs, top to bottom, there is no 1/2 or 1/4 portion missing, here are those cliffs again:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/apeofjungle/2145058531/http://www.flickr.com/photos/orodreth_au/1472106076/http://www.flickr.com/photos/big-e-mr-g/129592362/http://www.scribd.com/doc/9979943/Dove-Dover (download to watch at normal size)
I saved on scribd.com, the original photographs taken RIGHT ON THE CAP GRIS NEZ.
The photographers right there, preparing to take the second shot, called Shipspotting (we can see in the background Cap Blanc Nez):

And now the ship being spotted:

A completely flat surface of the water, with the White Dover Cliffs seen in their entirety; no ascending slope, no midpoint curvature of 22.6 meters, no visual obstacle of 65 meters.
Top of Cap Gris Nez hills, 45 meters in altitude, no curvature at all over the English Channel:
