They say it was made "in bad faith", and you believe it. Your choice, your beliefs.

The problem with what he said is that he tripled down trying to disprove the results of his own experiments, because he didn't like the results, and he **failed again**.

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Obviously you don't appear to want to be honest in addressing this, which is a shame.

If you ever want to argue your position, and can do so successfully, in the flat earth fridays space on twitter, I have 500,000 sats waiting for you.

I've been in an airplane on a clear day. I've seen the curvature of the earth with my own eyes, on many occasions. What evidence do the flat earthers have that proves what I saw wasn't real?

One guy in about 200BC, a Greek speaker living in Egypt proved the earth was round and even measured it's size with pretty amazing accuracy.

Why should I believe a bunch of lunatic conspiracy theorists and not all the normal honest scientists who give simple explanations that make sense?

Go ahead, prove the earth is flat. I'll wait :-)

Conspiracy theories, just like any theories, are science too, they are part of the scientific process, you shouldn't discard them.

"Bunch of lunatics" sounds like ad hominem to me. Bad science again on your part.

"Honest scientists" is questionable in some cases (because of conflicts of interest) and honesty is sometimes irrelevant because they aren't infallible, they make mistakes too.

They give "simple explanations" that make sense **to you**. General relativity is not simple, at least for the average joe. Even most physicists don't fully understand it.

"Go ahead, prove earth is flat, moron", is not how you create constructive dialog.

Flatearthers are right at questioning things, they are wrong at making a cult out of it.

But attitudes like yours justify them for creating a cult, it's a self-defense mechanism, defense from attacks like the one you just did.