Message from @rivenator12113

Discord ID: 605767019849187329


2019-07-30 14:15:30 UTC  

@SAM101907 Imagine you have 3 balls, 1 is the sun 2 is the earth and the 3rd is the polaris stars. the polaris stars are 323 light years away. The earth revolves around the sun. How can the polaris star show up at the same location everyday? I tried to make it as simple for you

2019-07-30 14:15:52 UTC  

@anon415454+4646 Spectrograph. If they can tell what is fusing in the start, they know what colour they should see.

2019-07-30 14:16:13 UTC  

"Imagine you have 3 balls" than you would have three times more balls than hitler had 😄

2019-07-30 14:16:25 UTC  

@SAM101907 Ah you see, there's where your argument become invalid. If it is relatively stationery, we shouldn't be able to see it at the same location every day

2019-07-30 14:16:33 UTC  

@rivenator12113 Again, there’s no issue here. It’s behaving like it should.

2019-07-30 14:16:46 UTC  

Then your argument is invalid

2019-07-30 14:16:49 UTC  

Why should we?

2019-07-30 14:17:03 UTC  

@SAM101907 how do they know what it is fueling it from the start?

2019-07-30 14:17:13 UTC  

We shouldn't be able to see it at the same location every day if it is relatively stationery and if it's 323 light years away

2019-07-30 14:17:16 UTC  

thats a circle thinking

2019-07-30 14:17:18 UTC  

@anon415454+4646 Spectrograph

2019-07-30 14:18:01 UTC  

@SAM101907 bro please, have you went to college? you should be able to make 3 premises and a conclusion, but your argument will still be invalid

2019-07-30 14:18:28 UTC  

ignore the first part, very rude of me

2019-07-30 14:18:54 UTC  

@rivenator12113 Picture this. If you were swinging next to a boat, and it moved ten feet in front of you left to right, it’s quite noticeable. Now have that same boat about 4 miles away and move the same distance, it will be hardly noticeable.

2019-07-30 14:19:15 UTC  

Swimming*

2019-07-30 14:19:35 UTC  

so many comments on this channel, cant find my previous message T_T

2019-07-30 14:19:54 UTC  

323 light years would be relatively way more than 4 miles away lol

2019-07-30 14:20:39 UTC  

@SAM101907 Please write your premies and your conclusion, I will show you where it is invalid.

2019-07-30 14:20:52 UTC  

Now if you swing ten feet to the right, the boat will still appear in the same location, because it’s so far. Ten feet compared to four miles is nothing. As is the diameter of earths orbit compared to 323 light years.

2019-07-30 14:21:41 UTC  

Swim*

2019-07-30 14:21:52 UTC  

Again, false comparison the distance away would be considerable further from the boat

2019-07-30 14:22:16 UTC  

Exactly!

2019-07-30 14:22:39 UTC  

See, then it shouldn't be 323 light years away

2019-07-30 14:22:45 UTC  

It would be unsound

2019-07-30 14:23:12 UTC  

According to Nasa

2019-07-30 14:23:41 UTC  

Why? It makes perfect sense. We hardly see any movement from it because of its incomprehensible distance.

2019-07-30 14:23:53 UTC  

If it

2019-07-30 14:24:17 UTC  

is very further away from the boat, wouldn't it need to be moving at an insane speed for us to notice it?

2019-07-30 14:24:24 UTC  

at the same location

2019-07-30 14:25:34 UTC  

I don't know why I'm still typing lol. This argument of yours is unsound if you choose to side with NASA

2019-07-30 14:27:05 UTC  

Why would it need to be moving at insane speed?

2019-07-30 14:28:19 UTC  

If it is 323 light years away, we wouldn't be able to see it at the same location every day. Because it would have to catch up to us every day when we revolve around the sun if you believe in the heliocentric model

2019-07-30 14:29:21 UTC  

Now if the earth was stationery and the distance was truly that far away, then we would see it in the same spot every day.

2019-07-30 14:29:49 UTC  

@SAM101907 but with spectograph you can only measure the light that already traveled here

2019-07-30 14:30:21 UTC  

it is impossible to measure the star itself since it trillions of kms away

2019-07-30 14:31:00 UTC  

is this real

2019-07-30 14:31:09 UTC  

@SAM101907 Check out eddie bravo flat earth podcast, he has some good arguments and some bad ones. Don't take everything for facts, imagine the premises and if they make sense. I really like the polaris one because you can't disprove it without believing in a geocentric model or if you don't believe in NASA

2019-07-30 14:31:25 UTC  

This should explain it

2019-07-30 14:32:12 UTC  

@hehexd the "earth" on your gif doesnt have antarctica nor arctica