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93 Million Miles Away?

  • Nov 22, 2024
  • 2 min read

According to NASA Space Center, the Sun is a massive ball of fire basically spinning super fast with all other planets spinning around it. According to NASA, the Sun is 93 Million Miles Away (About 150 Million km).
















But here's the thing; have you ever went to the ocean or probably you've gone to the beach right in the morning or near the end of the day, right? You know how you have that soft orange glow from the sun... Actually even in the middle of the day, this happens, take a look.


Maybe you'd like to tell me in comments how something 93 Million Miles away can reflect off of the surface of something only feet away from us. It doesn't make sense! If the Sun is 93 Million Miles away then why does it reflect off of the water? The law of physics says that when an object is reflecting off of something, it has to be above or near the reflector.

You stand in front of a mirror, right in front. Can you see yourself? Yes, you can. Now stand let's say, 10 feet away. Still can see yourself. Now stand about 10 miles away and see how much of your reflection is still on the mirror. Nothing! you're too small to be seen by the mirror, same with the sun, if the sun was 93 Million Miles away, there would be no focal reflection as you see in the picture above. The Sun has to be right above the earth to have any type of focal reflection. And seeing as in the picture above, you can see the reflection is right above, which means it is only possible on a Flat Earth, on a sphere, there is no true top or bottom, and if the reflection is always on TOP, that means that the sun is always on TOP which does not work in a "Spinning solar system" that NASA has announced.










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