I've really got to stop calling it aether. It seems to cause a lot of confusion. The reason for the name was that, when explaining UA to a noob, I used to compare it to a wind, and called it an aetheric wind.. They actually seemed to understand it, which is unusual for an angry noob.
since he's the only one of you who knows what he's talking about
This coming from the clown who said:
it would take more energy to stop it from accelerating than for it to accelerate.
The people you refer to may not all be the most knowledgeable about physics, but at least they aren't spouting such blatant uneducated bullshit as this.
And yet, you've yet to refute it. I think you might, once again, be misunderstanding what I said. It a statement in reference to inertia that was to serve as a short buffer, because I honestly have no idea how to explain the constant acceleration now that it can not be a superplasma.
There is (obviously) a magnetic field and atmosphere (or atmocylinder, rather) that protects the Earth from most cosmic radiation. In addition, much like in RE, it absorbs the energy from the aether. The aether is then deflected around it, wind that it is. The Moon, which does not have a magnetic field or atmosphere, proceeds to absorb most of the rest of the energy. When the aether comes back into contact with the Earth (at the bottom of the whirlpool), it takes a large amount of the energy back. Now, before you tell me I'm being an idiot again (which is an ad Hominem), read up on the supposed reason as to why the Earth doesn't heat up in RET.
Tell us how the "wind" maintains constant acceleration.
See above.
I never said that the Earth is flat because of AW.
Yes you did.
I'm pretty sure that was a logical fallacy, but I can't be bothered to look at the list. You're mixing up the two different 'why's. One 'why', the 'why do we know this', is answered by the Bedford Level Experiment. The second 'why', 'why did this happen', is explained by AW.