@top Don't tell me you took the flat earth pill.
@top I'm skeptical of the moon landings but the flat earth theory is bullshit. There are simple experiments you can do at home to prove the Earth is round.
@top You can see the ISS along with other spacecraft through a telescope on Earth. I'm pretty sure that the Earth is round and we've been to space. And I'm also sure that NASA has lied about a bunch of stuff.
@top I don't think something like that can fly in the air.
@top Something like the ISS. You can't have that thing fly in the air.
@top Well given how long the ISS has been in operation, someone would have noticed by now.
And I thought you agreed that the flat earth movement was a psyop.
https://thebag.social/objects/505a4b64-ce4c-413c-95ab-6159a04de5ce
@top I think the entire flat earth movement is. It really got popular when the mainstream left use the tactic of calling the mainstream right "anti-science". If you're skeptical of things like vaccines, GMOs, or climate change they often say something like "I bet you also believe that the earth is flat".
I really just think it's a psyop to make anyone who is skeptical of "established science" look stupid. Anyone who questions the narrative is lumped in with flat earthers.
@top I've been following the movement since 2012 (long before it became "mainstream") and I always kept an open mind to it, but I always came to the conclusion that it is round. And I never use NASA as a source to prevent circular logic.
Like the common flat earther claim that objects fall due to density and not gravity can be debunked by the fact that objects weigh less at higher altitudes where the air is less dense.
@top And I don't trust everything that I was taught in school. It's pretty clear that I'm a huge climate change denier and I also think that depression as a mental illness is fake.
Plus, I don't fully trust NASA. I'm pretty sure they have bullshitted a lot of things. I'm pretty skeptical of the moon landings and even the mars rover missions to a lesser extent (some photos are strikingly similar to photos on Devon Island).
@top Fair enough. I'm the same way.
It's just that there are some people who take the "don't trust the science" to the absolute extreme and pretend they live in some fantasy world where everything is made of four elements and we're flying on a turtle's back. Being skeptical means you question both sides, not doing the exact opposite of what one side says.
Plenty or people have noticed plenty of things but no one cares. They could also land somewhere no one can see them.