Krishna what do you think causes the tides? A wobble of the flat earth? Or like breath?
Edit. I'll just watch your vid. 2nd edit. A wobble, ok.
3rd. What I find amusing is that the mainstream model accounts for the two tides by saying, 1, the moon's gravity, and 2, the inertial force of the earth and moon moving in tandem. Yet the earth itself is spinning near 1000 mph at the equators surface yet that doesn't displace the land supposedly floating on magma or the water of the oceans towards the equator. Lol, some smart scientists to come up with that theory.
I think you should look into why they push this model in the first place, more particularly what heliocentricity has to do with it. Why do they worship the sun?
(Anyone other than the op don't expect a reply I'm not getting suckered into all that again...)
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[quote]Yet the earth itself is spinning near 1000 mph at the equators surface yet that doesn't displace the land supposedly floating on magma or the water of the oceans towards the equator. Lol, some smart scientists to come up with that theory.[/quote] I find this interesting as well. Or, when moving through space at 67,000mph nothing happens when the sphere hits the sharp turn in its supposed elliptical orbit.
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Sharp turn in an elliptical orbit? You clearly have never studied orbits, or ellipses for that matter. A circle is technically an ellipse. Obviously an orbit isn't going to be a perfect circle, but a lot of them are relatively close.
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Don't you ever wake up suddenly from sleep? Sometimes you feel like you've been falling, or even dreamt you were. This is that sharp turn.
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This is false. The reason we can't feel turns is the same reason we can walk in a airplane or on a bus or train. Because earns has its own atmosphere, which is why we can't feel it rotating either