I have seldom seen a more intense barrage of nutcakery. As a broadcast engineer, I can tell you for certain that the Earth is not flat.
In times of uncertainty, many of us find ourselves asking critical questions about the infrastructure we often take for granted. One of the most pressing concerns today revolves around electricity and the recurring blackouts that have left communities frustrated and searching for answers. Why are these blackouts happening? What’s really going on behind the scenes? Is there a larger plan at play?
For those seeking clarity, I highly recommend watching the video linked below, starting at 68:10. This segment dives deep into the underlying issues affecting our power grids, exploring potential causes, systemic vulnerabilities, and what might be fueling these disruptions. Whether it’s aging infrastructure, policy decisions, or something more complex, this analysis sheds light on the forces shaping our energy landscape.
Understanding these dynamics is crucial—not just for holding decision-makers accountable but also for preparing ourselves for what lies ahead. Knowledge is power, and staying informed is the first step toward driving meaningful change.
🔗 Watch here: https://odysee.com/@eklips:a/THE-LOST-AND-HIDDEN-HISTORY-OF-THE-FLAT-EARTH-By-EwarAnon:9?t=4090
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#EnergyCrisis #PowerOutages #InfrastructureFailures #BlackoutAwareness
Discussion
Yes. Flat earthers are insane, but rightfully so.
A lot of good people, who lack technical education, fall for the Flat Earth nonsense. They see how the media lie about some important things -- and that is definitely true, they do lie -- but then that leads them to start believing almost anyone who claims to be "exposing mainstream lies," not realizing that a large number of such people are nuts or grifters.
When your world is nothing but gaslighters, compulsive liars, kleptomaniacs and dark triad narcissists, you WILL GO INSANE no matter how educated you are.
I do think that science-related education can help. In my former work as a broadcast engineer, I had to learn equations that would tell me how strong a radio signal would be at a given distance from the transmitting antenna. For the results to be accurate, these equations have to take distance, antenna gain, and transmitter power into account, of course -- but they also must include terms to account for the curvature of the Earth. The short version is that, if the Earth were flat, FM stations from Lisbon could be easily heard in New York City. Knowing that makes you immune to this particular kind of kookery.