Quote:
Originally Posted by Unplugem
Rookie mistake buddy.
https://www.bitchute.com/video/WzbZwxN1gzhx/
It's called the law of perspective. You have to love how modern camera zoom technology blows their lie wide open.
P.S. I know Eric Dubay is controlled opposition, but this video by him is accurate, so I posted it here.
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No, wrong again. This is not forced perspective. Forced perspective makes things look smaller, but doesn't make things disappear. If things were flat, you would see something appears to be getting smaller, but if you used a telescope you could see
ALL of the object. In videos of sail ships, the entire ship drops below the horizon on a calm ocean day, so unless there are thirty foot swells hiding the boat, which there are not, you are seeing the curvature of the earth.
Even in that video, he is confusing two phenomena by showing a ship in a water swell being blocked from view, which is different to masts disappearing over the horizon because of the curvature of the earth.
Why don't you get into a plane, use the North Star and a compass to travel east and end up right back where you started?
Why don't you go to a large lake with a powerful laser, and you stand on a shore and your buddy stands on the other 40 miles away, and see if you can see a laser beam held horizontally?
What is your explanation for a lunar eclipse showing a round shadow of the earth on the moon regardless of where the moon is?
What is your explanation for the fact that at any time people from around the world can look up at the sky at night with their naked eyes or with a telescope in the day and see the moon, planets and stars, but they see a different sky? Why don't you have a thousand people from all over the world snap a picture of the sky at the same time, and if it is entirely the same then the earth is flat, but it isn't that way, so what is your explanation? Why can't everyone on the planet see the moon and/or sun at the same time?