Message from @Ronin
Discord ID: 641624095255166997
So the earth exerts a force
this is why helium baloons rise up, they are lighter than the medium they are in,so they rise until they find equilibrium
@Ronin if they do that in the iss station the stone stays at the same place
Why would anyone bring a guitar to space... for anything other than the sole purpose of entertainment?
once the helium baloon gets to the point where nitrogen and oxygen is beneath it, it will sit at rest
Define "down" and " up"
don't need to, rise or fall is good enough
No
things find their equilibirum
hes gonna say perpendicular to the ground
Why dont they go sideways
planes go sideways, so do birds
so do people, cars, and trains
and whats the point of that sentence
Normal kids helium balloons rise because the atoms inside of the balloon are moving faster then air/ lighter than air. Then it will normally pop at the stratosphere
moving horizontal on the flat earth
so you are talking about vertical movement on flat earth
You have no rise or fall of theres no force determining their path
planes wouldn't work if what I'm saying isn't the reality
the reality is we live on flat earth, regardless of what globers think
look, imagine the box again but you dont know where the ground or the sky is where does the stone go
gravity would keep things on the ground, there would be no flying, but it doesn't work, things rise and fall and gravity isn't a force that anyone needs to contend with
It is
mass doesn't attract mass
cavendish experiment is an illusion trick
FE is an illusion
and density and bouyancy are the things acting on stuff
No
well, we find no curvature. no curve = flat earth
They are literally the effect of gravity
Let’s move to <#538929818834698260>
we have measured for your globe and found it lacking
Pls
this isn't a debate
Yeah, yeah it is.
we live on flat earth, to debate the shape is not fruitful
the facts back me, waste of time to argue with clueless
going to grab some food
Bailing out? :))
lol
if you want to break away from your delusions, find the curve