Author: FENews
In July of 2018, the National Weather Service uploaded a photograph to their Twitter account. It showed a picture of a thunderstorm in Kansas. The sky cam is elevated off the ground at about 30 feet. According to the Earth Curve Calculator, the horizon should be about 6.7 miles away from the camera if it is at that height. The city of Larned 120 miles away is in the picture.
Patricia Steere was interviewed recently about her beliefs by a reporter for the Houston Chronicle. Patricia is a Houston woman and fellow Flat Earth believer. She calls herself a “conspiracy realist” who believes that real conspiracies are taking place to cover up the truth about the Earth. Steere talks about her beliefs in recorded podcasts for her YouTube Channel, which she calls “The Flat Earth and Other Hot Potatoes.”
In 1969, the world was told that astronauts from Apollo 11 had landed on the moon. There was even a live video feed which supposedly showed the first men to ever step on the moon. People were glued to their television sets to see this historic moment. But in the years since, many skeptics have stated their doubts about the authenticity of the video and the moon landing itself.
Flat earth researcher Brian S. Staveley is interviewed by Carlos, Nick and Brandon on Emergency Exit 66 Podcast . The video is over an hour but it is very fast paced, with a wide variety of subjects tackled. The last minutes were presented as a newscast. The interview starts with a discussion of NASA faking space flight and moves through commercial flight routes;
We have all seen televised NASA rocket launches from over the last five decades. Some of you may have even witnessed a rocket launch in-person from the ground. But did you ever see the rocket go into outer space? Of course not; nobody has. All you see is the rocket ascending in a curve toward the sky.
There are a few truths in this world. The Earth is round. Gravity is a wonderful thing. Space is a vast void of craziness that we have yet to understand, just like the depths of the ocean. Yet, some people still doubt the reality of that first truth I mentioned. The flat earth revolution is driven by a strong-willed group of people who doubt mainstream science
One of the most famous basketball players in the world believes the earth is flat…or does he? In a recent NY Times interview, Celtics point guard Kyrie Irving spoke about flat earth theories. Irving was naturally evasive when confronted with the question “Do you believe the earth is flat?” High profile players with big endorsement portfolios have to be careful about what they say.
Luminaries such as rapper B.o.B and NBA star Kyrie Irving have sprinkled doubt — whether in jest or not — that the Earth is as it appears in pictures. And now a YouGov survey of 8,215 American adults comes out that offers troubling results. The numbers appear to show that only 84 percent of Americans have always believed the Earth is round and had no doubts about it.
Several years ago, Daniel Clark was looking to direct a documentary when he read discussions on Reddit about an increasingly popular topic: whether the Earth was actually flat, and if we were living in a Truman Show-like simulation. Clark’s curiosity brought him to the Flat Earth International Conference.
On the last Sunday afternoon in March, Mike Hughes, a sixty-two-year-old limousine driver from Apple Valley, California, successfully launched himself above the Mojave Desert in a homemade steam-powered rocket. He’d been trying for years, in one way or another. In 2002, Hughes set a Guinness World Record for the longest ramp jump—a hundred and three feet—in a limo, a stretch Lincoln Town Car.