Message from @Wolfgang Goyim
Discord ID: 658175684497375252
any curve
lol
We csnt post photos
Earth aint flat
earth fat
Earth aint flat
What’s up @CommanderSky1
Comms
Pla
Sorry
I’m at a party with my family
We can talk tomorrow
sa
astmoSPHERE
hahahahhaa
wow
yo nice mute guys
i spoke for maybe 15s total and muted x d
you lied Lawrence
almost like your scared
scared
scared haahahha
you haven't seen storms on jupiter
not what i said
now you're gonna get muted in chat
you literally muted me before i could make my point
pathetic
!mute @Lawrence[300IQ]
Sunsets and sunrises happen at different times depending on your longitude. If the Earth were flat, then someone in New York and someone in Los Angeles would see the sun rise and set at exactly the same time as one another. But in practice, the difference is approximately three hours. Not only that, but at every point in between, the Sun rises/sets at a different time, something that could not happen if the Earth were flat. The fact that it can be evening in New York and late afternoon in Los Angeles, or morning in New York while it's still before dawn in Los Angeles, is something that a flat Earth can't account for.
Different stars are visible from different latitudes. Look up at the night sky from a very high (northern) latitude location, and you'll see the Big and Little Dippers, the bright orange giant Arcturus, and the Pleiades, among other sights. Yet if you head to the south pole, none of these celestial sights are visible, but you can see Alpha Centauri, the Magellanic Clouds, and the Southern Cross, all of which are never visible to most northern hemisphere skywatchers. If the Earth were flat, everyone on the night side of the Earth would see the same sky; this is another observation that the flat Earth can't account for.
Different locations on Earth experience seasons at different times. Ever notice how the summer in the United States corresponds to winter in Australia? Or how winter in Italy lines up with summer in Argentina? This is because the Sun's rays, which are almost perfectly parallel, strike Earth at different angles during different parts of the year. If the Earth were flat, the Sun's rays would always come in at the same angle, meaning that the USA, Australia, Italy, and Argentina would all experience the seasons the same exact way. The flat Earth idea can't explain this.