Message from @The18thDoctor

Discord ID: 501091196718940170


2018-10-14 17:51:13 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484515890759729182/501089614149189642/image_3-3-1.jpg

2018-10-14 17:51:39 UTC  

can see too far with no curve is another one

2018-10-14 17:52:55 UTC  

@Citizen Z The person who took that image talked about how they had to wait for the refractive conditions to be just right. Also, you do not see down to the bases, a lot is still missing. And, it is a well-known fact that you can only see the mountains from that vantage point on a few days of the year.

2018-10-14 17:53:17 UTC  

Mechanical gyroscopes in what experiment?

2018-10-14 17:54:07 UTC  

@The18thDoctor they are following the suggested globe model.

2018-10-14 17:54:17 UTC  
2018-10-14 17:54:19 UTC  
2018-10-14 17:54:57 UTC  

just because most of the time u have limited vision doesn't change the fact we can see too far on flat earth

2018-10-14 17:55:31 UTC  

Waiting for clear skies. Refraction only works if the light is traveling through different mediums

2018-10-14 17:55:54 UTC  

The medium is the same

2018-10-14 17:55:56 UTC  

Different mediums, like air with different temperatures.

2018-10-14 17:56:13 UTC  

I can see the skyline of chicago skyline 60 miles away a few times a year, no curve

2018-10-14 17:56:15 UTC  

Where is your proof of that happening?

2018-10-14 17:56:28 UTC  

Lighting going up then back down

2018-10-14 17:56:36 UTC  

The fact that you can't see it on any other days of the year.

2018-10-14 17:56:52 UTC  

How do you know?

2018-10-14 17:57:01 UTC  

You been there everyday?

2018-10-14 17:57:18 UTC  

Next video shows angular resolution

2018-10-14 17:57:31 UTC  

Do your own research, the mountain is only visible on certain days of the year.

2018-10-14 17:57:34 UTC  

Next video shows boats over horizon debunked

2018-10-14 17:57:49 UTC  

Rockets don't work in a vacuum, nothing to push off of

2018-10-14 17:57:58 UTC  

According to someone who sits there 365 days?

2018-10-14 17:58:10 UTC  

Who did that?

2018-10-14 17:58:19 UTC  

@^Kevin^ Rockets don't need a thing to "push off of". Do your research.

2018-10-14 17:58:41 UTC  

@The18thDoctor show me a thruster doing precision maneuver inside a vacuum chamber

2018-10-14 17:59:03 UTC  

Space suits don't work in a vacuum, one time they tried it in 1965 Astronot went unconscious

2018-10-14 17:59:27 UTC  

Oh yeah, in 1965, when the first space suit had barely been developed.

2018-10-14 17:59:36 UTC  

👌

2018-10-14 17:59:41 UTC  

topical

2018-10-14 17:59:54 UTC  

astronots don't practice in a vacuum because 1) space suits don't work, 2) too dangerous

2018-10-14 18:00:04 UTC  

what's astronots?

2018-10-14 18:00:14 UTC  

he thinks he is cleaver

2018-10-14 18:00:16 UTC  

@The18thDoctor show me the video and data for a thruster from NASA or any real laboratory that designs thrusters for supposed space craft inside a vacuum chamber producing thrust.

2018-10-14 18:00:35 UTC  

astronots practice in a swimming pool

2018-10-14 18:01:03 UTC  
2018-10-14 18:01:14 UTC  

and what is the given reason why they practice in a swimming pool kevin?

2018-10-14 18:01:23 UTC  

Thats not a thruster and not a high vacuum and not a real test. Its a mickey mouse test

2018-10-14 18:01:27 UTC  

all I had to do was copy and pasting half of what citizen z said