Logo

Do "flat-earthers" attempt to sail around the world to prove their theory? Would this support their belief in a flat Earth?

Last Updated: 18.06.2025 10:04

Do "flat-earthers" attempt to sail around the world to prove their theory? Would this support their belief in a flat Earth?

What have we learned?

Long story short, no evidence has changed some flat earthers public position on flat earth.

If they are honest flat earthers, and not total muppets, it’s hard to understand how they can keep failing to weigh the evidence against flat earth. Which may imply it comes down to some sort of faith gripped tight in their hands, refusing to let go.

How did you cope when someone you love, dealing with hyper-independence and trauma, felt they needed space to heal alone? Were you able to support them without overstepping, and did you eventually reconnect? How did that journey unfold?

Is it that their brains are incapable of rational appraisal of information and a desire to get to the truth by making the best informed decision they can?

Is it because they are trolls and not really flat earthers?

Sad, really sad. And frustrating. What is wrong with people, I keep having to ask?

Why are Democrats deflecting and aren’t as tough on Hunter Biden with all of his criminal activity and his rising possibility of him receiving a charge for illegally owing a gun?

Will, probably nothing, we knew this was going to happen.

But in the face of compelling evidence, there are flat earthers who will reject it.

A Colorado pastor just paid to bring some flat earthers and globe earthers to see the 24 hour sun in Antarctica. People with flat earth channels. At least one of them admitted that there really is a 24 hour sun in Antartica. Some flat earthers said the existence of this would disprove flat earth. Now flat earthers are spamming all sorts of reasons why either this whole trip was fake, or that a 24 hour sun doesn’t disprove a flat earth.

Scientists create a two-dimensional carbon material eight times stronger than graphene - Earth.com