How about you stay on topic?
Again, if the Earth would be accelerating upwards, then explain the difference in gravitational accelerations around the globe. A ball at the north pole, in a vacuum, falls faster with 0.5% than where you stand right now.
It's simple to prove: You need a ball, a vacuumed tube, and some basic sensors, and measure the time it takes for the ball to fall through the tube in two different locations. There will be slight differences in gravitational acceleration.
That means that, if what you're saying is true, then different parts of the Earth are accelerating at different rates. That means that the Earth would be ripped in pieces.
And does your "gravitational claim" says that the Earth is accelerating with 9.81 m/s/s? Does that mean that 30 million seconds, or 0.951 years since the Earth started accelerating , it will be traveling with the speed of light, if it supposedly started accelerating from 0, which would rip matter apart.
We know the Earth has an age of about 4.7 billion years. We should be travelling with 4 900 000 000 (almost 5 billion) times the speed of light right now. Don't you see how absurd is your claim?
And even if you're a creationist (I have to assume this. You seem the creationist type), we would be travelling with about 6000 times the speed of light, which is physically impossible and stupid.
And if you claim that Earth is traveling with a constant speed, then it does not have acceleration, and the way a ball falls would be different. It would be like it's falling in slow motion, with a constant speed, or if its speed is greater than the Earth's, then it would continue going upward forever.
The REAL ball trajectory is only possible if something is stopping it from going upward (AKA Gravity). The ball has a -9.81 m/s/s acceleration -approximately- that makes it slow down, and come back towards the Earth.
Conclusion: The universal accelerator hypothesis is proven false. Please find a different FE explanation for gravity.
And again, as long as you don't prove the evidence wrong, there's no reason for me to assume it is wrong. And no, it doesn't work the other way around: Scientists proved it right. And if you're gonna throw the conspiracy claim, you have no proof for it, so it's invalid. And you can't prove the ball trajectory argument wrong (can you??).
Your turn, jroa.