A Plane not A Planet
Dear Flat Out Truth Seekers,
I have spent two years doing research and putting together this book. I really hope you enjoy it and find it full of useful information that you can share with others. I apologize in advance for any grammatical errors you will assuredly find. Please let me know so I can correct in the next editions.
Either way, please share this with all.
Peace and Light to the Flat Out Truth,
Aplanetruth
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***If you do buy a book on Amazon, please post a comment. It will help spread the word
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17) Is Sir Isaac Newton’s “Law of Gravity” Just One Great Big 500 Yr. Old Lie?
18) How Did The Kings of Astronomy Get it So Wrong? Part I: Copernicus – Newton
19) How Did The Kings of Astronomy Get it So Wrong? Part II: Einstein and the Still Earth
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Check out my Moon album and notice how you can only see craters where the crescent is, no where else on the surface.
https://www.icloud.com/sharedalbum/#B0T5FhYPQGdJAiM
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/5128047/flat-earth-movement-google-search-2017-latest/
SUPPORT for the Flat Earth movement has been exploding in popularity with millions believing NASA is trying to dupe us about the shape of our planet.
Google Trends data reveals searches for “flat earth” in the past two years has tripled with a 90 percent surge in interest in the cranky conspiracy theory.
Look at “satellite dishes” they point over the horizon, not straight up to allegedly connect with communication satellites over 60 miles above us and hurtling to stay in geosyncric orbit with Earth traveling at 17,500 mph. So why does 97% of all internet rely on undersea cables?
Hundreds of thousands of miles of fiber-optic cable lay on the ocean floors, a crucial part of the global internet’s backbone, and only rarely do ship anchors, undersea landslides or saboteurs disrupt them.
“The infrastructure that underpins the internet – these undersea cables – are clearly vulnerable,” said Rishi Sunak, a British member of Parliament and champion of more vigorous action to protect submarine networks. “They underpin pretty much everything that we do.”
Undersea cables conduct nearly 97 percent of all global communications, and every day an estimated $10 trillion in financial transfers and vast amounts of data pass through the seabed routes. Satellites, once crucial but now limited in speed and bandwidth, handle only a tiny percentage of global communications.
Lots of satellite dishes mounted to balconies on an apartment building facade, Pallasseum or “Berlin Social Palace” (Berliner Sozialpalast) apartment block in Schoenberg, Berlin, Germany, Europe