Well, it did seem quite aggressive when you questioned my honesty.
Apologies for that. We get a lot of people who come through here boasting great things about their experience but it turns out they are just making stuff up so make themselves sound believable.
I too have spent considerable time in the wilderness over the years but only as a hobby, so I've used a map and compass some too, but not nearly as much as you,
Your questions just didn't make sense to me considering your experience, that's all. But maybe you hadn't realized that our map was flat with a north pole in the center.
However I am merely trying to wrap my head around the idea of a flat earth. Trying to post a picture, but don't realize how, I'm on a phone. Tips?
Oh yeah pictures have to be under 128kbytes. You could get an app that lets you resize it, or if you email me the photo to the following address I can resize it for you and send it back.
t f s o f l a t @ g m a i l . c o m
(Just delete all the spaces, I don't want a million spam bots to pick it up.)
So if I understand you right. North is the center of our world. And a compass would behave the same way as it would in a spherical scenario, i.e not at all close to the magnetic North pole? It will just spin. Once you pass the pole, the N compass needle will turn as the pole is always North. Continuing in the same direction you are then heading South? (as on a sphere).
If I understand what you're trying to explain, yes. You're on a flat disk about 24000 miles in diameter. The north pole is in the center. The compass will always point there.
If you are someplace and going north, you will arrive at the north pole, and if you keep going straight the compass will swing around because the north poll will now be receding behind you.
But when you then hit the wall, where are you? South?
Exactly. "South" is an ice wall - a perimeter - all the way around the flat earth. That's the "south pole." even though it's a ring, not a pole. It is the magnetic south pole. (Magnets can have a ring for a pole, as my videos above showed.)
Cause if I go straight South from the N. Pole I will also hit the southern wall, right?
Yes, you will hit the southern wall.
But it is not the same location?
The southern wall is very long. There are many places you could hit it that are not all the same location.
If the flat earth is 24000 miles in diameter, it is about 75000 miles in circumference. About 121,000km in circumference.
So there is a lot of area there to explore.
I guess this probably seems stupid to you, but believe me if your not accustumed to the idea of a flat earth its not so easy to understand.
Fair enough.
Trying to process the GPS theory, but no it dosen't make immediate sense. It seems speculative and paranoid. But I will try my best to understand.
Exactly. Speculative and paranoid is not a invalid description.
It is also absolutely vital to the survival of the flat earth theory.
We are all speculative and paranoid in some ways. I mean, you wouldn't go in a car ride with a stranger who stopped you at a cross walk. Not that he ever did anything to you before, but you just don't know who he is or what he's up to, so yeah, you're speculative and paranoid about what he might be up to.
It just happens that the flat earth community is very speculative and paranoid about anything that creates a difficulty for the flat earth belief.
The whole ice wall is what puts me off. Cause I know a few people that have been to Antartica. Both scientists and explorers. And its definitely not impossible to do.
Our response to that is that yeah you can go to near the wall, and their navigational systems may have told them that they were at the geographic north pole, but in reality they weren't actually there. They were still hundreds of miles off from the ice wall.
Its just very very expensive. Heck you can do cruises there these days. One Norwegian explorer, Borge Ousland crossed it in 1997. He was also the first to do the NW and NE passage in a sailship, actually circumnavigating the North Pole. Also check out Jarle Andhoy. A world sailer, he went to the South pole without any permits. He got into a shitload of trouble, but he didn't get shot. However his sailship with to people on board dissapeared in a storm while he was on his way back from the pole. It pissed of the New Zealanders cause they had to put on a huge s&r.
If the ice wall surrounds our entire world and is guarded by soldiers I find it surprising there is not a single whistleblower. Generally with the whole FE theory I find this interesting, there must have been quite a lot of people in on the secret. However this is a different discussion.
yeah it is quite a feat they have pulled off guarding the edge.
In a few years I am going to citumnavigate the world with my 43ft Colin Archer sailship, I will search for the wall!
I appreciate your answers.
Splendid, I wish you all the best, and I look forward to photos of the ice wall when you return!