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This one picture sums up the retardation that is NASA and its heliocentric claims. When you found out that the chimney wasn't even attached to the building at Auschwitz, did you still believe the Holocaust was real?

submitted by McNasty to SPACEisFAKEandGAY 9 monthsAug 1, 2024 22:09:17 ago (+3/-6)     (SPACEisFAKEandGAY)

The Flaws in Heliocentric Claims: Gravity, Atmosphere, and Lunar Tides

https://files.catbox.moe/lkcyvy.png

The heliocentric model, which posits that the Earth revolves around the Sun and the Moon orbits the Earth, is deeply ingrained in modern scientific thought. However, this model contains several inconsistencies and contradictions, especially when examining the behavior of our atmosphere and the influence of gravitational forces. By exploring these contradictions, we can expose the weaknesses in heliocentric claims regarding the atmosphere and the Moon's effect on tides.

The Atmosphere and the Vacuum of Space

One of the most glaring issues with the heliocentric model is the explanation of how our pressurized atmosphere can exist next to the near-perfect vacuum of space. According to the second law of thermodynamics, gases should naturally move from areas of higher pressure to lower pressure until equilibrium is reached. In this case, the high-pressure atmosphere should expand into the vacuum of space, yet this does not happen.

Proponents of the heliocentric model argue that gravity prevents this expansion. They claim that gravity, even at its weakest point on the edge of the atmosphere, is sufficient to keep the gases from dissipating into space. However, this explanation is fraught with problems. Gravity's pull weakens with distance, and at the edge of the atmosphere, it is significantly weaker than at the Earth's surface. The notion that this feeble gravitational pull can counteract the natural tendency of gases to expand into a vacuum is highly questionable.

The Moon and Tides

The explanation for tides in the heliocentric model further complicates the picture. It is claimed that the Moon's gravity is strong enough to cause high and low tides on Earth. This implies that the Moon's gravitational pull can influence the Earth's oceans, which are under the strongest influence of Earth's gravity. If the Moon can exert such a force on the Earth's oceans, then logically, the Moon's gravity should have an even stronger effect as we move upwards from the Earth's surface towards the Moon.

At higher altitudes, the Earth's gravitational pull weakens, while the Moon's influence would ostensibly become stronger. Therefore, at the edge of the atmosphere facing the Moon, both the Earth's and the Moon's gravitational forces should be competing for the same matter. This competition is further complicated by the presence of the vacuum of space, which would naturally draw the atmospheric gases outward.

Competing Gravitational Forces

If the Moon's gravity can pull on the water at the Earth's surface, where Earth's gravity is strongest, it stands to reason that this pull would be even more pronounced at higher altitudes, where Earth's gravity is weaker. Consequently, the gases in the atmosphere at the edge facing the Moon should be caught in a tug-of-war between the Earth's and the Moon's gravitational forces. The vacuum of space would add another layer of complexity, as it would exert a force causing the gases to expand outward.

This situation leads to a paradox: if gravity is indeed responsible for holding the atmosphere in place, then the Moon's gravitational pull should disrupt this balance, particularly at the edge of the atmosphere. The competing forces of Earth's gravity, the Moon's gravity, and the vacuum of space create a scenario that the heliocentric model fails to adequately explain.

Conclusion

The heliocentric claims that gravity can hold the atmosphere in place and that the Moon causes tides on Earth are fraught with inconsistencies. The second law of thermodynamics dictates that gases should expand into a vacuum, yet we are told gravity prevents this, even at its weakest point. Furthermore, if the Moon's gravity can cause tides on Earth, it should also significantly affect the atmosphere, particularly at higher altitudes where Earth's gravitational pull weakens. The heliocentric model's inability to reconcile these competing forces and natural laws highlights its flaws and calls into question its validity. By examining these inconsistencies, we can see that the explanations provided by the heliocentric model are not only implausible but also contradictory.


20 comments block


[ - ] DukeofRaul 3 points 9 monthsAug 1, 2024 22:10:08 ago (+3/-0)

Jacque costea worked with nasa and all he talks aboit is global warming now

[ - ] McNasty [op] 3 points 9 monthsAug 1, 2024 22:10:56 ago (+4/-1)

global

That's the key. It's a cult of "globalists."

[ - ] deleted 0 points 9 monthsAug 1, 2024 22:11:07 ago (+0/-0)

deleted

[ - ] DukeofRaul 2 points 9 monthsAug 1, 2024 22:13:22 ago (+2/-0)

Have you read babylons banksters? Doesnt really matter if its real so long as everyone agrees

[ - ] McNasty [op] 3 points 9 monthsAug 1, 2024 22:15:58 ago (+4/-1)

Babylon was just a large cult of sun worshipers who dispersed and spread out across the world. The different factions created from this disbursement are all part of the same cult. This is why Jesuits will never expose Freemasonry or jews. This is why world wide human trafficking is never addressed. All of the secret societies and cults are originally from the same Sun war shipping cult. They all know this.

[ - ] DukeofRaul 1 point 9 monthsAug 1, 2024 22:21:44 ago (+1/-0)

The sun worship is thing whites made up and browns took literally

[ - ] McNasty [op] 2 points 9 monthsAug 1, 2024 22:22:21 ago (+3/-1)

No. Don't downplay it. It comes from Kabbalah.

[ - ] DukeofRaul 1 point 9 monthsAug 1, 2024 22:23:02 ago (+1/-0)

Jews took kabbalah from atlantis and misinterpreted it

[ - ] McNasty [op] 1 point 9 monthsAug 1, 2024 22:24:11 ago (+2/-1)

Prove your claim. If you can't, I'm sticking with the default that Kabbalah is an ancient Sun worshiping cult practice by the likes of Judaism, Freemasonry, Jesuits and so on.

[ - ] DukeofRaul 1 point 9 monthsAug 1, 2024 22:31:31 ago (+1/-0)

Okay it takes more than 40 hrs

[ - ] McNasty [op] -1 points 9 monthsAug 1, 2024 22:32:24 ago (+0/-1)

I don't subscribe to the Bible and I don't subscribe to any of these Babylonian beliefs. What I do know is that there are people that do subscribe to these beliefs. I'm not going to pretend like they would not have an objective to hide that.

[ - ] DukeofRaul 1 point 9 monthsAug 1, 2024 22:31:37 ago (+1/-0)

[ - ] deleted 0 points 9 monthsAug 1, 2024 22:33:12 ago (+0/-0)

deleted

[ - ] McNasty [op] 0 points 9 monthsAug 1, 2024 22:33:24 ago (+1/-1)

Nope. Lol. You're not going to find anything relevant or truthful with a YouTube search.


What possibly would make you think that something in YouTube's algorithm would be knowledgeable and beneficial??

[ - ] DukeofRaul 1 point 9 monthsAug 1, 2024 22:34:41 ago (+1/-0)

For the sake of conversation

[ - ] McNasty [op] -1 points 9 monthsAug 1, 2024 22:36:56 ago (+0/-1)

I don't humor blatantly obvious counterintelligence. If you can find it in the YouTube search bar, that's what it is.

[ - ] DitchPig 1 point 9 monthsAug 1, 2024 23:00:43 ago (+1/-0)

No. It's jewish as fuck.