Message from @jlegend
Discord ID: 550415991390077102
!ban @debatemaster101
@debatemaster101 did '**Unspecified.**' and got the ban hammer! <:CHECK6:403540120181145611>
Lmao poor Tristan
😆 😆 😆
Oof
I'm not even banned yet lok
Lol
U guys are calling things lies but are u looking at that, that is a lie
The earth is round
Actually no
Globies are boring as shit
Anyone want to explain how you see different stars at different places on the flat earth
Or how a solar eclipse works on a flat earth
Where is everyone
Idk
Anyone want to explain how the north star has been the north star for thousands of years and how Orion's belt is still the same positioning as the great pyramids after over 4500 years and how the constellations never change? If the earth was a globe shooting through space at almost light speed, these things surely would have changed.
Polaris proves the earth doesnt move and the stars have always went around us.
At work.
Solar eclipse works just fine
I have some gifs at home on PC I'll send later
Kind of illustrates it
Found one
@Citizen Z "If the earth was a globe shooting through space at almost light speed" earth moves at 0.01% the speed of light.
The stars move along at high speeds speeds, but they are so far away that it takes a long time for their motion to be visible to us.
Also in that gif it shows that solar eclipse only happen above the southern hemisphere
The stars are light years away. If an object is light years away and even if you're moving really fast, does it appear to move? No. The further away something is, the more you (or it) has to move for it to actually appear to be moving.
This is really just a Google away.
@Quorum u just repeated my point
Didn't read your point beforehand.
Wrong
Explain
The milky is supposedly moving at something like 14 million miles per hour
Yet we see zero movement
Lol
That's not counting the supposed spin of the milky way
But the stars we see are within the Milky Way. If the entire Milky Way Galaxy is moving and spinning, everything within it is moving at the same rate, so to the Earth's reference frame, the stars don't change all that much.