Message from @🎃Oakheart🎃

Discord ID: 632008359662321704


2019-10-11 00:12:03 UTC  

You want me to record a video of myself jumping?

2019-10-11 00:12:11 UTC  

and make some smoke so you can visualize the air too?

2019-10-11 00:12:31 UTC  

show evidence of all the claims you made in that statement

2019-10-11 00:12:42 UTC  

"To make one complete rotation in 24 hours, a point near the equator of the Earth must move at close to 1000 miles per hour (1600 km/hr). The speed gets less as you move north, but it's still a good clip throughout the United States." - https://www.astrosociety.org

2019-10-11 00:12:57 UTC  

Just a quick google search will return that.

2019-10-11 00:12:59 UTC  

False information.

2019-10-11 00:13:03 UTC  

@Silly Rabbit, Trix Are For Kids says the guy that thinks a picture of a tennis ball supports a claim

2019-10-11 00:13:19 UTC  

!mute @Issah trolling

2019-10-11 00:13:20 UTC  

2019-10-11 00:13:20 UTC  

If the earth was spinning at 1000mph, how could we POSSIBLY land any sort of airplane.

2019-10-11 00:13:23 UTC  

Thank you.

2019-10-11 00:14:05 UTC  

What really matters is the airplane speed relative to the air around it.

2019-10-11 00:14:16 UTC  

showing an example to support a claim can be said to be a kind of evidence

2019-10-11 00:14:28 UTC  

Ok

2019-10-11 00:14:40 UTC  

Would you agree that airplanes have to keep nose diving so they dont fly off into space?

2019-10-11 00:14:42 UTC  

First, am I able to post pictures?

2019-10-11 00:14:47 UTC  

To account for a globe-earth?

2019-10-11 00:15:02 UTC  

i think youll need to be verrified first

2019-10-11 00:15:05 UTC  

An airplane parked on the ground is still moving with the ground.

2019-10-11 00:15:25 UTC  

According to the globe.

2019-10-11 00:15:35 UTC  

It makes much more sense for the earth to be stationary

2019-10-11 00:15:35 UTC  

its a claim

2019-10-11 00:15:48 UTC  

even if the ground is moving 1 nanometer per year, they're still moving together.

2019-10-11 00:16:01 UTC  

can you prove that?

2019-10-11 00:16:22 UTC  

move a bottle of water, does the water inside the bottle move with it?

2019-10-11 00:16:48 UTC  

so, youre changing topics

2019-10-11 00:16:51 UTC  

When you're sitting in a moving car, don't you move with it?

2019-10-11 00:17:04 UTC  

Deflection at it's finest.

2019-10-11 00:17:06 UTC  

it's the same concept

2019-10-11 00:17:13 UTC  

looks like oakenheart wins

2019-10-11 00:17:23 UTC  

it does not even matter if the Earth is moving or not

2019-10-11 00:17:38 UTC  

Thank you!

2019-10-11 00:17:52 UTC  

oakheart, sorry

2019-10-11 00:17:53 UTC  

How wouldn't it matter.

2019-10-11 00:18:10 UTC  

The gravity just isn't adding up.

2019-10-11 00:19:21 UTC  

Only the relative speed matters. And as far as how much the rotation of the Earth matters only affects centripetal acceleration (or if you want to say, centrifugal). And even at 1000 mph at the equator, the resulting centripetal acceleration is insignificant compared to the rate that things fall.

2019-10-11 00:23:56 UTC  

The bumps you feel while driving down the road have more acceleration with them than the centripetal acceleration of Earth's rotation. At the 'accepted' speed of Earth's rotation, it's just not significant enough. Also, the rotation of Earth doesn't have anything to do with gravity.

2019-10-11 00:25:07 UTC  

As far as you know =)

2019-10-11 00:25:15 UTC  

As far as I know.

2019-10-11 00:25:57 UTC  

Show us an experiment proving this spinning globe earth?

2019-10-11 00:26:01 UTC  

^