Message from @Steve Angell
Discord ID: 606298840722702336
Show me how it is possible to see Norfolk Harbor inlet from 40 miles away on a bridge just 20' in elevation on your Globe Earth. No 1085 foot curve.
You just said we weren’t willing to discuss it, yet anything we present you just ignore. Who isn’t willing here?
40 miles isn’t that far
No I said you would play a mind game which you did. Go to something else that is just a FAKE photo from Not A Space Agency. What does Nasa mean in Hebrew?
What would qualify as evidence then?
1085 feet of curve is a huge amount of curve. That would mean a 9 story building could not be seen.
Yet we saw the beachfront in the Harbor 40 miles away. No curve at all.
1085 feet in 40 miles?
Might wanna recheck your math
Yes do the math. Simple theory of a triangle. A - Radius. B = distance and C = curvature - radius.
a^2 + b^2 = c^2. Of course to do the math you must take the square root of C
Sure, how high are you from sea level?
20'
But I could care less about your Fake equation that determines a midpoint. That is utter BS.
No reason whatsoever to determine where a midpoint would be. It just is using math falsely to minimize the curve.
So you don’t even want me to calculate it?
I just told you how to do it properly. Proper is not using a Globie site to do it for you when a simple equation works.
You want to do circular reasoning. Use globe theory to prove the globe. Not going there.
So I can only use the equations that give you your presupposed result?
That’s not circular reasoning Steve.
That’s using math to properly explain the scenario.
Excuse me it is. Using a globie site to prove the globe. Circular as it gets.
pathragum
It is not basic math
Show me the site that is not designed by a globie to do the math.
When this simply proven math theory works. Why not use it?
Lol nigg
Which one of these are you trying to do, Steve?
@Deleted User site is not findable.
Is Steve 20’ from the ground or from sea level?
See circular reasoning. That assumes the ball is real.
Why would anyone trust it? I guess Globies do.
Give us the coordinates so we can verify
@Steve Angell you are looking in the wrong places
That’s like saying you can’t use algebra to do an algebra problem. YIKES
Google Map is rather simple. The bridge is easily seen leading to it from the north.
We stopped just as soon as we got on it. About the only possible place you can stop.
What’s the coordinates for the bridge?