So selective gravity again?
A scientist speaks to a student, the scientist says "silver displays anti-bacterial properties, but helium does not" and the student replies "so selective atoms again?" in a childish sarcastic accent.
Stunning, after all why should I assume that there is gravity on earth? Just because there is gravity elsewhere shouldn't mean it's here, right? However, apparently there is some force here on earth that does fit that description.
... and your logic is, let's assume there is gravity everywhere else except the place where we can observe the described properties first hand?
We're both assuming, but only one of us is backing their assumptions up with observations.
Also, your atoms example is a great analogy until you realize that atoms can be demonstrated to have selective properties.
If the pendulum and star rotation could both be caused by rotation and if going to the southern hemisphere produces nearly similar affects for two unrelated phenomena (one being inertia and the other being just the apparent movement of stars) then isn't this a great explanation?
If you take the pendulum experiment wholly unto itself, yes, but we don't live on an island of one experiment. FET is a theory, not a single hypothesis.
One experiment? There are 100's of ways to demonstrate Coriolis. Similarly there are many ways to demonstrate rotating stars but the explanation is the same: A spinning ball.
How many ways does FET have to demonstrate Coriolis causing this in the northern hemisphere while tides cause it in the south, as you put it?