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Flat Earth Investigations / Re: "Behind the Curve" experiments [looking for flat earther responses]
« on: March 10, 2019, 08:04:27 PM »Yeah, I'm struggling with the claim you make there are 312 such flights a year.Everyone knows the stuff you post in support of this supposed long distance flight does not really exist.
This route is flown 312 times a year. In fact, people are boarding at gate 57 right now.
Could you please tell me how you think this works? Do they have an empty gate in a busy international airport for an hour every day and no-one notices, not even the private company (Sydney Airport Holdings) that owns the airport? Or maybe tens of thousands of actors file through the gate every year and are whisked away in buses, and an empty plane takes off? Or they actually fly but the flight is mysteriously 15 hours late every day, despite all other information - flight radar, Johannesburg Airport website (http://www.johannesburg-airport.com/arrivals.html), etc - saying it arrives around 4:35pm local time? No-one at that end notices that the plane doesn't arrive or no passengers disembark?
I'm really struggling with this one.
No way, no how, there are that many people interested in making a trip from South Africa to Australia in a year, let alone virtually every day.
No justification for the flight to even exist.
For someone who constantly demands proof from others on what they say, you sure do make a truck load of assertions without any evidence or justification.
I met a large contingent of Australian florists in Nairobi 2 years back seeking to buy flowers from Kenyan farms. Flights from Nairobi to Sydney regularly go via Johannesburg. There's one justification for flights between J'burg and Sydney.
Like someone else mentioned here, Rugby is enjoyed by many in the Southern Hemisphere. The Super Rugby league has teams from Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and Argentuna taking part annually. Then there is tourism, education and what not.
I know you Northern Hemispherics seem to think nothing happens south of the equator. But down here be more than monsters strange things.