Message from @He Cute

Discord ID: 667552680033386506


2020-01-17 02:02:41 UTC  

No

2020-01-17 02:06:15 UTC  

If you’re talking about the one on Netflix? Yes.

2020-01-17 02:06:29 UTC  

Or discovery channel.

2020-01-17 02:07:45 UTC  

Atmospheric conditions do play a part in what you can see. There’s a reason they did the striped flag experiment over one of the most humid places in California. To obscure vision.

2020-01-17 02:09:49 UTC  

17 minutes into that video, they do a similar experiment over the same area of water, at different times of the year. Red pill philosophy found he could see further during different times, depending on the weather.

2020-01-17 02:11:13 UTC  

The striped flag experiment was a blatant attempt to deceive people. It’s called damage control. Since fe really can’t be stopped.

2020-01-17 02:11:27 UTC  

2020-01-17 02:11:59 UTC  

2020-01-17 02:12:03 UTC  

?

2020-01-17 02:12:09 UTC  

What is up with that dang bot?

2020-01-17 02:12:20 UTC  

i don't know i guess

2020-01-17 02:12:20 UTC  

Someone is using bad words.

2020-01-17 02:13:32 UTC  

what i wanted to say without any insults is that mark sargent is a shill, he should've known that he needed to use a laser at a right 90 degree angle instead he used a flash light and held the flash with his arms swinging it around never making a precise 90 degree angle

2020-01-17 02:13:55 UTC  

There’s that too.

2020-01-17 02:14:35 UTC  

So do you believe the planets are globes then?

2020-01-17 02:14:48 UTC  

Or no?

2020-01-17 02:14:52 UTC  

No. They’re wandering stars.

2020-01-17 02:15:22 UTC  

look through a strong camera and all you will see is blurry lights

2020-01-17 02:15:38 UTC  

They have different orbits than the rest of the Stars, but they’re still stars themselves.

2020-01-17 02:16:49 UTC  

That video is showing how to focus on venus

2020-01-17 02:17:19 UTC  

Pretty cool if you ask me

2020-01-17 02:19:04 UTC  

the earth is the ground of the universe and the stars are just rotating around the earth in a planetarium. i don't know what's above us but i do know what underneath our feet with certainty

2020-01-17 02:19:18 UTC  

What's below us?

2020-01-17 02:19:38 UTC  

a flat plane, 70% flat

2020-01-17 02:19:45 UTC  

mostly flat

2020-01-17 02:20:29 UTC  

the most humans were ever able to dig down was 8 miles, that barely scratches the surface according to the globe model

2020-01-17 02:21:17 UTC  

And this is mars in focus, with glober assumptions.

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484516084846952451/667554004494057472/image0.jpg

2020-01-17 02:22:55 UTC  

We really don’t see terrestrial things like dirt, ice, etc. Every time we have from a mainstream source, or even an amateur, where they somehow saw it through a super duper telescope. They are using photoshop. Computer generated imagery. It isn’t real.

2020-01-17 02:24:11 UTC  

i think what is above us are spherical because if you look through a p900 you can see them change face during the day and this got me really excited, what if we were able to see the back of the moon in antarctica?

2020-01-17 02:25:16 UTC  

that would shatter the whole globe model if that was possible

2020-01-17 02:25:36 UTC  

but the elite are smarter than that, they block antarctic entry to everyone

2020-01-17 02:25:54 UTC  

except a couple of scientific personnel

2020-01-17 02:26:19 UTC  

The moon although round, doesn’t behave like any rock sphere/spheroid on earth. There’s never a hot spot on it from alleged reflected sunlight. It’s entirely unique.

2020-01-17 02:27:53 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484516084846952451/667555666604326916/image0.jpg

2020-01-17 02:28:35 UTC  

I man direct sunlight is different from a lamp.

2020-01-17 02:28:42 UTC  

yes, it's really unique. have you heard about the cold moonlight experiment? a guy took an infrared camera and saw that everywhere that was in the shade was hotter than the areas that were affected by the moonlight

2020-01-17 02:28:45 UTC  

or photoshop.

2020-01-17 02:29:03 UTC  

Interesting.