Look up, the sky doesn’t lie. Polaris, the North Star, stays fixed in the Northern Hemisphere. The further south you go, the lower it drops in the sky until it disappears beyond the equator. If Earth were flat, Polaris would be visible everywhere, but it isn’t.
Meanwhile, Southern Hemisphere stargazers see an entirely different sky, including the Southern Cross constellation. And the stars there rotate in the opposite direction. That can only happen if we’re on a spinning sphere.
The night sky is not just random twinkling lights, it’s a map. And the map doesn’t make sense on a flat plane. You can’t fit that sky onto a disc, the math won’t hold.
You want evidence, look up at night. The stars betray the flat Earth every time.
Look up, the sky doesn’t lie. Polaris, the North Star, stays fixed in the Northern Hemisphere. The further south you go, the lower it drops in the sky until it disappears beyond the equator. If Earth were flat, Polaris would be visible everywhere, but it isn’t.
Meanwhile, Southern Hemisphere stargazers see an entirely different sky, including the Southern Cross constellation. And the stars there rotate in the opposite direction. That can only happen if we’re on a spinning sphere.
The night sky is not just random twinkling lights, it’s a map. And the map doesn’t make sense on a flat plane. You can’t fit that sky onto a disc, the math won’t hold.
You want evidence, look up at night. The stars betray the flat Earth every time.