You seem to be so sure when describing the Moon, and yet one of the most important scientists who ever worked for Nasa was much more humble:
The Moon has astonishing synchronicity with the Sun. When the Sun is at its lowest and weakest in mid-winter, the Moon is at its highest and brightest, and the reverse occurs in mid-summer. Both set at the same point on the horizon at the equinoxes and at the opposite point at the solstices. What are the chances that the Moon would naturally find an orbit so perfect that it would cover the Sun at an eclipse and appear from Earth to be the same size? What are chances that the alignments would be so perfect at the equinoxes and solstices?
Farouk El Baz,
NASA
That person was not filming the rising/setting of the Moon. The clip features a very fast motion of the Moon, right at that point in time.
Here are more clips featuring very strange phenomena:
This was filmed in Kiev, just last night:
https://x.com/KyivOperativ/status/1899944124981399966https://x.com/UaCoins/status/1899942206565146801This was caught on camera in LA:
https://x.com/ZT_Followers/status/1899868898448859185This is from Cornwall:
https://x.com/ZT_Followers/status/1897438660091326943The very best scientists at Stanford University were very concerned about the fact that the Gizen plateau was inundated for weeks. So was Dr. Luis Alvarez (Nobel prize winner):
https://www.theflatearthsociety.org/forum/index.php?topic=30499.msg2225892#msg2225892It was not the Thera volcanic eruption. The Earth, in the heliocentrical setting, must have undergone a polar shift.
The Pentagon had sent a team of physicists to measure the changes in the position of the north magnetic pole:
https://web.archive.org/web/20190521125906/https://avalonlibrary.net/ebooks/Kenneth%20White%20-%20World%20in%20Peril%20(extracted%20pages).pdfTheir findings? They were expecting (1946) the reversal of the magnetic poles and the polar shift of the Earth.
The mechanics of the astronomical reset, according to my research:
A comet is going start the entire reset, there are four choices; two of these comets were involved in the 1811-1812 geological reset of North and Central America. The other two are comet Halley and comet Hale-Bopp.
In 1811, on December 16, a meteor from comet 12P/Pons-Brooks struck the New Madrid fault, causing the largest earthquake ever recorded:
https://www.theflatearthsociety.org/forum/index.php?topic=30499.msg2419438#msg2419438Alexander Humboldt had described the tremendous geological upheaval in Central and South America:
https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/6322/pg6322-images.html (chapter 1.14)
In 1812 a series of very powerful earthquakes realigned the island of California with the north-american continent:
https://www.theflatearthsociety.org/forum/index.php?topic=30499.msg2169555#msg2169555 (seven consecutive messages)
Comet Encke will play a role at the end of the astronomical reset.
Then, a massive Birkeland currents wave, starting from Sgr A West (or Sgr A) will hit the Orion/Gemini constellations. In the past, this kind of event caused the Crab Nebula supernova.
The most powerful hipernova had occurred in the Geminorum area, the so-called Rudra event which had been described in Vedic mythology. Rudra is the Betelgeuse star, and at the same time is planet Mars.
The reversal of the magnetic poles will take place, accompanied by the rotation of the entire stellar dome, the North Star will not be Polaris anymore.
At the same time, the Sun will start to orbit beyond the Tropic, in order to reach the other side of the dome, where it will rise from west to east (or north to south).
Here is one of the greatest scientists at Nasa, Dr. Norman Bergrun, who wrote a book saying that the rings of Saturn are being created continuously by giant UFOs:
https://archive.org/details/ringmakers-of-saturn/page/3/mode/1up"Bergrun is a distinguished former NASA research engineer who has made major innovative contributions to multiple U.S. aeronautic, missile and rocket programs.
He has also won many top science and engineering awards, including the California Society of Professional Engineers Archimedes Engineering Achievement Award."