Message from @Platinum Spark
Discord ID: 598969293320749234
You can actually do it yourself
And watch out the window the whole time
If you fly to China from the US, most flights go north over the arctic
You present no proof. Just your religious beliefs on the globe being a globe.
No I’ve actually done it
And you can to
On restricted access being indeed restricted.
Literally you can go get a ticket to China
You can just buy it with cash
And fly over the North Pole
You can run a camera the whole time pointing out the window
Yes you can fly over the North Pole. Works much better on the flat earth.
Yes, but you argued that you couldn’t
South Pole not North.
So glad we solved that, now onto the South Pole
You said north and south
He flew over the North Pole. But was not allowed to fly over the South Pole.
So he went from Brazil down and back. West then back home. Yet called the flight around the North and South pole.
Here ya go
Here’s a long list of some of the many people who have crossed the South Pole
With about 20 different reference links
Excellent. Some evidence, finally.
As the Lancair slipped to a landing at Punta Arenas, in southern Chile, the surroundings were familiar, for this was the airport where he had spent much time in 2013 awaiting favorable weather to continue the flight across Antarctica and onward. But that weather didn’t improve, leaving Harrelson to call off that first attempt.
On Dec. 31, 2014, Harrelson once again challenged Antarctica, heading south over Tierra del Fuego and the Drake Passage and what mariners have long known as probably the worst consistently bad weather anywhere.
Hours into the flight, heading toward the South Pole, visibility was at least clear and he had burned off enough of the Lancair’s heavy fuel load to climb to some 12,000 feet. But flying over the unending expanse of white in the perpetual light of summer is deceiving, for the continent itself rises beneath the plane. At the pole, the Harrelsons explained, Antarctica is about 9,600 feet—nearly 2 miles—above sea level.
Despite a problem with the airplane’s autopilot, he was able to reach the pole and circle it. But headwinds were increasing, cutting the Lancair’s forward speed and causing it to burn more fuel, leaving too little to reach his destination.
Faced with a key decision, Harrelson knew he had little choice but to turn around and head back, once again, to Punta Arenas. The difference this time was that he had reached the pole and would not have to go there again.
He did not do it. Just a tall tale. Nothing more. Not around the world. Not across Antarctica. Always excuses as to why not.
all I've heard so far are tall tales
a billionaire couldn't do it, but you can't remember who.
at least there's an article for this particular tale.
Well they pushed me down and i nearly died. So sure I know they are serious.
pushed you down??
I think I missed something
what happend?
Yes I was in the Hospital for a month. I was in the attic working on replacing the floor and ceiling on the third story. So there was no floor. I felt a huge push on me and the next thing i knew I was in the Hospital and I nearly died.
That is why I save nothing.
It also to this day makes remembering connections like names of anything people, food, etc. very difficult.
who did
How would I know. These people are professionals. I never saw the person. I just felt being pushed very hard.
I'm sorry that happened to you Steve, but I'm glad you survived.
This was after the vehicles parked and my tea poured out mostly and the rest smelled strange so i dumped the rest.
What people