Message from @Kazat0
Discord ID: 624358718133370890
thats why you dont see any person who has actually seen the edge of the earth
Do you think that they are hiding dragons on the edge of the world?
Maybe they are hibernating
or maybe the eat you when you reach the end
We should like move the Amazon fire to the edge of the world so it melts the ice
We are getting out of point tho
You see I believe that earth is a cube because 2+2=4-1=3 and that's quick math
what do you see when you reach a corner of the earth
Space duh
If you jump you fall down
In space
!mute @LolCat troll and fake flat earther
!mute @Echo_N_Enzo troll
Poof
@California Nightmare 2.0 sorry to ping you, but I am back home now, do you wish to continue our debate?
Can’t
I’m busy currently
Perhaps later
Ok
well technically you never reach the "edge" of earth because earth is a sphere and there are infinitely many "edges" on a sphere so you never reach the "edge" of earth because of gravity, perspective, and simple geometry
however if you keep going up from your point of view then yes @Echo_N_Enzo you would see space
Tbh it would be cool if the earth was flat
And there where and indestructible dome protecting us
true
unfortunately i don't believe in god so that doesn't even have any baseline proof for a dome
meanwhile there is mountains of evidence for the globe
but i see what you're saying
.
wow
no swearing
anyways
it would be awesome if we did tho
lol
no more astroids amir?
Impossible as light speed as far as i know
Well at least with my and our physics knowledge
So, one of the reasons I can't believe in a flat earth is that it doesn't work with plate tectonics
if we're a disk flying upwards through space, either the disk has a molten core driving the processes, in which case, why doesn't the magma melt its way down and fall out of the world?, or tectonic processes are a hoax, which, the globalists or whomever's to blame would have to had planted not just the fossils, but *all* the rocks and soils known to geology
unless there's a flat earther theory of geological processes, in which case, I'd be very interested