Message from @TheNidhugg

Discord ID: 662445149783195680


2020-01-02 23:55:56 UTC  

the footstop of the astronauts on the moon wouldn't have left a trace like it did, there's no moisture on the moon according to nasa. debunked by their own beliefs 😂

2020-01-02 23:56:39 UTC  

yeah, the earth is flat without a doubt. the horizon never curves

2020-01-02 23:56:39 UTC  

what does that mean

2020-01-02 23:56:43 UTC  

About the footsteps

2020-01-02 23:56:45 UTC  

Footsteps do not require moisture to form.

2020-01-02 23:57:53 UTC  

I'm saying the Earth is observable measurable repeatedly tested flat through the scientific method not a belief @nesymerp1

2020-01-02 23:57:56 UTC  

@Thinky one that is as extreme as this do

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484516084846952451/662444499812745219/maxresdefault_6.jpg

2020-01-02 23:58:28 UTC  

Not necessarily.

2020-01-02 23:58:36 UTC  

It is very fine dust, after all.

2020-01-02 23:58:43 UTC  

Do you understand that flat is not a shape it is a description of a shape ? @nesymerp1

2020-01-02 23:58:53 UTC  

Fine dust in a near vacuum

2020-01-02 23:59:00 UTC  

Yes.

2020-01-02 23:59:04 UTC  

Mythbusters proved it could be done

2020-01-02 23:59:13 UTC  

And you could too

2020-01-02 23:59:17 UTC  

Just make a vacuum

2020-01-02 23:59:19 UTC  

Your trolling now I just told you @nesymerp1

2020-01-02 23:59:55 UTC  

Of note though, a horizon in a flat Earth doesn't make much sense to me. Is it just that you cannot see that far out?

2020-01-03 00:00:17 UTC  

@Thinky you know how minecraft has a render distance

2020-01-03 00:00:23 UTC  

Ahhhhh

2020-01-03 00:00:28 UTC  

That's basically how the flat earth horizon works

2020-01-03 00:00:31 UTC  

Earth is flat. What I want to know is how high up I need to get to see across the US.

2020-01-03 00:00:32 UTC  

apollo astronauts claiming that space is deep black while iss astronauts claiming that they can see space full of stars

2020-01-03 00:00:47 UTC  

Apollo Astronauts do not claim that

2020-01-03 00:01:10 UTC  

Early color cameras lacked the focus to depict stars with any reasonable clarity while focused on individuals.

2020-01-03 00:01:21 UTC  

I would also not see stars in broad daylight

2020-01-03 00:01:35 UTC  

we aren't talking about cameras, we're talking about what they saw with their own eyes

2020-01-03 00:01:47 UTC  

@Superiorna_Artiljerija You know the AEGIS Fire Control Network for the Burke, right?

2020-01-03 00:01:50 UTC  

Also there was an x-ray telescope on apollo that was able to see stars

2020-01-03 00:01:55 UTC  

No flat earther thinks there an edge @nesymerp1

2020-01-03 00:01:56 UTC  

What about it

2020-01-03 00:02:02 UTC  

they should've seen space full of stars but they claimed otherwise

2020-01-03 00:02:04 UTC  

Well, let's talk

2020-01-03 00:02:07 UTC  

About how prior to it

2020-01-03 00:02:12 UTC  

@Question For Your Life Are you sure about that

2020-01-03 00:02:18 UTC  

Radar was limited to about 25km for surface targets

2020-01-03 00:02:21 UTC  

Due to the horizon

2020-01-03 00:02:39 UTC  

Even though it could track and intercept an aircraft out to 250km

2020-01-03 00:02:43 UTC  

Think SM-2

2020-01-03 00:02:46 UTC  

Or RIM-66

2020-01-03 00:02:52 UTC  

I can't speak for everyone but most people here and another servers agree unless they're flat Earth Society @That Sick 🅱astard

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484516084846952451/662445742165590044/Screenshot_2019-12-16-19-16-49.png