Tuesday, December 24, 2024

conspiracy resource

Conspiracy News & Views from all angles, up-to-the-minute and uncensored

Flat Earth

New Flat Earth Theory Suggests the Earth Is Round, Actually

Flat earthers have to bend themselves into all sorts of knots in order to convince themselves that the world truly is flat.

It’s not, in case you were wondering, and you can test that for yourself. But for some reason, a few people who spend far too much time online have convinced themselves that a debate that’s been settled for hundreds of years is actually an open question.

These people will yell at you until they’re blue in the face about horizon lines, NASA lies and more, all to try to say that the globe earth is a lie upheld by billions around the world to do… something. Honestly, it’s unclear what they think we’re gaining from saying the earth is round, but hey, at least they’re passionate.

Now, there’s a new theory in flat earth land: the earth is round, just not in the way that we think.

This theory, called the “Great Ice Ball” theory, speculates that our world is near flat, but on a massive ball of ice that could contain other worlds. According to some random people on Reddit, this would make our earth 3.6×10^13 km2 in surface area — i.e., bigger than the sun.

Seeing this, some people may ask for “proof.” If you’re one of those people, it’s clear you haven’t been involved in the flat earth game for very long. There’s basically no evidence to support this, and even the creator of the image appears unsure of what this would mean for our earth. Would it be one of many earths? Is this ice ball hollow? Who knows!

The contingent of those who believe this theory is pretty small, it seems. After all, you already need to hit your head pretty hard to believe in flat earth — how much more trauma must your brain endure before you think that we’re on a big ball of ice?

Nevertheless, it’s fun to speculate about. I just wish they’d go back to the glory days of thinking we all live on a giant turtle.

***
This article has been archived by Conspiracy Resource for your research. The original version from eBaum’s World Gaming News can be found here.