I guess we're debating how water sticks to a globe again

  • 937 Replies
  • 108230 Views
?

Jorking Dey Venis

  • 26
  • BUT IF CURVED, WHY ME SEE FLAT?
Re: I guess we're debating how water sticks to a globe again
« Reply #930 on: January 15, 2025, 06:54:04 AM »
Turbo are you gonna reply to the box pushing thought experiment?

Re: I guess we're debating how water sticks to a globe again
« Reply #931 on: January 24, 2025, 01:23:39 AM »
Turbo are you gonna reply to the box pushing thought experiment?

Turbs will post a long rambling post after post to push this in the background, and just result in people dancing around what Turbs wants to post.  Might as well debate an attention seeking parrot. 

Re: I guess we're debating how water sticks to a globe again
« Reply #932 on: January 25, 2025, 07:59:36 AM »
Funny. Since the Final Experiment, the well documented trip to Antarctica with witnesses, the proof of a 24 hour Antarctic summer sun, and sun spots not a mirror image on the Antarctica sun, seems FE crashed and burned.

But I still have faith Turbs will still post paragraph after paragraph of useless babble.  You can do it Turbs. Where’s that arrogant idiocy while in the jaws of defeat? 

Re: I guess we're debating how water sticks to a globe again
« Reply #933 on: February 15, 2025, 01:22:25 AM »
Proving a massive continent actually exists sounds really strange, why would it be so hard to prove such a thing as that really exists?

We could fly directly across the south pole, from one point to another point on the other side.

The trick here, is that we cannot use directions used for their ball Earth fairy tale story.

The line crossing from one point on one coastline of Antarctica to the other point on the other coastline must be defined and fixed beforehand.

We have flown directly across the so called North Pole because it’s the center point of the flat earth.

They won’t ever fly across the South Pole because it doesn’t exist. We would hit the wall if we ever tried to do it.

*

JackBlack

  • 23785
Re: I guess we're debating how water sticks to a globe again
« Reply #934 on: February 15, 2025, 01:43:12 AM »
Proving a massive continent actually exists sounds really strange, why would it be so hard to prove such a thing as that really exists?
The issue isn't proving it exists.
The issue is finding evidence lying POS like you wont just dismiss as fake.

There are already mountains of evidence showing it exists, but you just dismiss it all as fake because it doesn't fit in your fantasy.

The line crossing from one point on one coastline of Antarctica to the other point on the other coastline must be defined and fixed beforehand.
By who?

We have flown directly across the so called North Pole because it’s the center point of the flat earth.
And we have flown across the south pole.
You just dismiss it as fake.

But good on you using this as an excuse to flee the topic yet again.

Re: I guess we're debating how water sticks to a globe again
« Reply #935 on: February 15, 2025, 02:36:30 AM »
Because they are faked, same as everything else is faked or most of it is.

They’ve been caught lying about Saturn with all our video evidence, and your last excuse is about an iPhone blurring out multiple distinct belts into one large blotchy area that constantly moves as Saturn spins rapidly and endlessly. What is next?

*

JackBlack

  • 23785
Re: I guess we're debating how water sticks to a globe again
« Reply #936 on: February 15, 2025, 01:52:56 PM »
Because they are faked, same as everything else is faked or most of it is.
Which just demonstrates my point.

It is not about proving it exists. That has already been done, and honest people accept it exists.

It is lying POS like you that will dismiss anything as fake if it goes against their fantasy.

Why is it fake?
Do you have any justification at all, or do you just need to dismiss it as fake because it goes against your fantasy?

Re: I guess we're debating how water sticks to a globe again
« Reply #937 on: Today at 11:33:58 AM »
Hahahaha spectscularly called out for being bad faithed.