Notice how your invite is nothing like the final experiment?
You have basically invited us to get shot.
Exactly.
If you knew anything about the real Antarctic Treaty, you would understand that there are teams of ships, that there is a no fly zone, that any REAL flat Earthers will be shot on sight.
On the other hand, what you said speaks volumes about your mentality.
1. "People from Texas are dangerous."
2. "Guns kill people."
3. "I would do that, so of course they'd do it to me."
Sorry, but having been to Texas, they are no better or worse than any other people. A gun sitting untouched does not tend to kill people unless the powder explodes or something. And as to the third point, you are safer among armed Flat Earthers than unarmed round Earthers.
Why do I say this? Well, it's simple. On average, flat Earthers have to defend their ideas often, as basically everyone and their grandma thinks they are wrong and stupid. Which is more dangerous? A narcissist whose idea of reality comes crashing down? Or someone who has built up an extremely thick skin having been critiqued all the time?
So, first of all, these people do not have the authority to send me to real Antarctica. Trying to visit Antarctica would get me locked away at best, and at worst, those involved will simply shoot me for betraying internationally protected zones, just as if I tried to waltz in to a US army base.
And second of all, the area they called "Antarctica", I am welcome only as long as I play by their rules. Submit to jeering and insults, don't say or do anything that gives the game away. If, for instance, I punch the wall, shattering the illusion, at best I am liable for a multi-million dollar piece of equipment, which would economically ruin me. At worst, they stop the tape, don't tell the public I was even involved, and I am beaten to death in this isolated set. My body would never be found.
So yes, it's quite a bit like the final experiment. It is called the final experiment, because you get discredited or killed if you accept the free trip, and told you're frightened of the truth if you refuse. Sorry, but what I'm maybe frightened of is a gang of round Earthers trapping me in a room and beating me to death.
Some being a utopia, some being a dystopia.
Utopia doesn't exist. The word literally comes from a word meaning "nowhere." Any utopia you build will be a utopia only for a few, and dystopia for everyone else.
Or they might do whatever they can to ensure everyone gets enough food to survive.
Or they might decide to draw straws to decide who gets to live and die.
You could have loads of different things happen.
Yes, you could write an idealized unbelievable story with unbelievable characters. But flaws are part of characterization. Idealizing governments or people just makes you hopeless.
Mayor Cole (found out his name) is a classic "do as I say, not as I do" leader.
As for why they should feel betrayed, for the same reason if I had grown up as a childhood friend of you, we played together and so on, and suddenly I start espousing flat Earth ideas. "I thought you were one of us!" No, people have the right to their decisions. But the flat Earthers who see these videos walk away with the sense that their heroes sold out on them.
No, I am not. I am admitting that I am afraid I will be led into a trap. Just as I wouldn't go back to a boss who abused me, I don't feel comfortable going to a strange place with people I do not trust. If I were to pay to a trip to visit southern hemisphere glaciers that would be one thing, but the market skeptic in me also doesn't trust free cars or phones to replace the old ones. Keep in mind that I didn't get Windows 10 or 11 computers, despite them offering to upgrade without cost.
So, if I said that you could get a free trip to the equator, and something about the equator proves FE supposedly, and I tell you that you're afraid to go visit the equator so that must mean it is true, is that really a sound argument? No. There are plenty of reasons for not taking a free offer:
1. Not having the interest or the time.
2. Worry about the people offering the trip.
3. Not liking the weather in the area.
4. Wondering about the "fine print" so to speak.
5. Having seen films like Manchurian Candidate where people are brainwashed. Also having seen cult movies (Split Image is fucking scary).
6. Assuming they are right, having to put up with pricks rubbing it in your face. I get enough of that online.
7. Assuming they are wrong, you have wasted a trip on nonsense. And you can't even get these insufferable assholes to admit it.
8. Distrusting something specifically because it is free.
But yes, feel free to tell me how that is the only reason you wouldn't go on a free trip. Year after year, I refuse to go on vacations with my family. It must be because I'm afraid New Jersey or Bahamas don't exist.
Markjo, I have more respect for you than Jack Black. He thinks that law-abiding citizens will kill him.
And yes, I've read one of these articles. They say some pretty weird things tho. If I remember correctly, they think that all flat Earthers also don't believe in Australia. Sounds to me like some dumbass mixed up continents beginning with the letter A.