Message from @Jondar02

Discord ID: 626715417473187840


2019-09-26 09:38:37 UTC  

or are things that we don't understand actually preventing us from seeing that it is actually concave? ^^;

2019-09-26 09:39:11 UTC  

possibly, , but if the evidence leads towards concave then so be it

2019-09-26 09:39:32 UTC  

"Answer: Yes, the Sun - in fact, our whole solar system - orbits around the center of the Milky Way Galaxy. We are moving at an average velocity of 828,000 km/hr. But even at that high rate, it still takes us about 230 million years to make one complete orbit around the Milky Way!" how could the stars remain the same if this were true?

2019-09-26 09:40:13 UTC  

Well we're going kinda slow on the scale of the whole universe....

2019-09-26 09:40:15 UTC  

well, if they all move around the centre of the galaxy at the same rate?

2019-09-26 09:40:40 UTC  

youre both going hypothetical now

2019-09-26 09:40:56 UTC  

I don't think NASA presents us with the truth, I think the world / "universe" is a lot smaller

2019-09-26 09:41:09 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484514023698726912/626714874172407808/Ikbk8SE.mp4

2019-09-26 09:41:18 UTC  

But why would they not?

2019-09-26 09:41:19 UTC  

or, again, maybe we are the universe

2019-09-26 09:41:44 UTC  

because people lie to other people to have control over them

2019-09-26 09:41:45 UTC  

how does a distant planet such as uranus reflect enough light from the same even more distant sun back to earth for it to be visible to us with the naked eye? hhm

2019-09-26 09:41:48 UTC  

@Silly Rabbit, Trix Are For Kids Well no youre looking for a flaw in the existing theory, the existing theory says the stars are really far away so how am I going hypothetical and you're not?

2019-09-26 09:42:09 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484514023698726912/626715124605911040/why_would_they_lie.png

2019-09-26 09:42:16 UTC  

it was obvious how you went hypothetical

2019-09-26 09:42:26 UTC  

By saying the stars are far away?

2019-09-26 09:42:27 UTC  

Okay, to what purpose?

2019-09-26 09:42:35 UTC  

dont try to troll me

2019-09-26 09:42:40 UTC  

@carlito Uranus wasn't discovered until 1781, using a telescope

2019-09-26 09:43:05 UTC  

I'm not trolling, I'm interested

2019-09-26 09:43:19 UTC  

intrigued

2019-09-26 09:43:32 UTC  

'uranus' you have to love it omw someone is laughing right now

2019-09-26 09:43:54 UTC  

no, I simply responded to your question

2019-09-26 09:44:19 UTC  

don't take it personally i wasn't referring to your answer

2019-09-26 09:44:27 UTC  

your anus was discovered with a telescope
Uranus smells like rotten eggs
Can't you see they are mocking you?

2019-09-26 09:44:46 UTC  

^^

2019-09-26 09:45:16 UTC  

You can spot Uranus in the southeastern portion of the night sky. Look for the constellation Pisces, a pair of fish sprouting out into a “V” formation. You should be able to see a tiny blue-green Uranus flashing in between that “V” close to the bottom.Oct 19, 2017

2019-09-26 09:45:22 UTC  

what 'cha'll going on about

2019-09-26 09:45:32 UTC  

the heliocentric model

2019-09-26 09:45:50 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484514023698726912/626716047130755083/gas_giant.png

2019-09-26 09:46:51 UTC  

Okay, okay, do you guys believe in the 8''/mile thing?

2019-09-26 09:47:40 UTC  

and that gas would be mainly helium ?!

2019-09-26 09:47:53 UTC  

@Jondar02 no its flat

2019-09-26 09:48:41 UTC  

what prevents the gas atmosphere on earth from flying away?

2019-09-26 09:48:53 UTC  

But you provide calculated proof with using that as a globe earth model, at least I'm told so and I'm not completely sold on using those numbers

2019-09-26 09:49:01 UTC  

grabbity is the mainstream answer greenbean

2019-09-26 09:49:32 UTC  

grabatitty

2019-09-26 09:49:50 UTC  

people can't let go of their science fiction fantasy bullshit

2019-09-26 09:50:02 UTC  

because they love the lies

2019-09-26 09:50:20 UTC  

well the lie is quite elaborate and appealing too

2019-09-26 09:50:22 UTC  

maybe that's why