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20204944? ago

Neu Schwabenland.

1947 admiral Byrd goes down there and gets fucked up by third Reich ayylmao 4d hollow earth a-Pollo flying discs. We try to reverse engineer in nm (project 1479) but crash IT. then they send us a message in 1952 by flying over the Capitol.

20205004? ago

^^I'll have 1 of whatever they had^^

20205095? ago

Comment is condensed and in shorthand but I think it might be accurate.

20205164? ago

Hollow earth? Did everyone get one but me?

20208509? ago

It's a torroid.

It makes a lot of sense.

Guy with multiple physics and engineering degrees here.

Just look up what water does spinning in space.

20211028? ago

Electrogravitic propulsion

20210884? ago

It’s spelled “toroid.”

There’s zero evidence of any other body -planet, star, planetoid, asteroid, kupler belt object, comet, etc, being torus or toroid shaped.

What phenomena would cause ours to be different than every other observeable object which is roughly-spherical?

There is a certain mass that under which, a small asteroid doesn’t need to be spherical, but over a certain mass a body collapses on itself from gravity. Look up Ceres and Vesta for more info.

20212675? ago

Where'd you get that evidence?

Nasa?

20212894? ago

My backyard nightsky, with my own simple set up and my own eyes.

I highly recommend that you take with a grain of salt anything you hear from the cabal-controlled government agencies, especially “NASA.”

With your own eyes you can see Mercury, Venus, the moon, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn. With a fairly, low-cost telescope you can see even more local objects and with a higher degree of resolution. (It does require some level of patience to ensure your telescope is properly collimated. But there are a ton of resources on this these days.)

I would check this backyard astronomy resource out for more information around this. You can observe so many interesting things with your own eyes and a fairly cheap telescope. Especially if you live out in the country with no light pollution.

http://www.deepskywatch.com/Articles/what-can-i-see-through-telescope.html

20208529? ago

If Earth was hollow, then that would affect the gravity of the planet. Does Earth's gravity support a hollow Earth? Or is our gravitational constant wrong.

20209058? ago

Go read about electrogravitics... Really.

20213919? ago

You've got all these degrees but you can't give a straight answer.

20208571? ago

Gravity would be effectively the same for us on the surface.

It's reasonable to put the center of gravity of a torroid in the center, like a solid ball.

But the inner surface would have centrifugal force pushing them "down" which would feel like gravity.

20213944? ago

But if the inside of the Earth was air, it would be far less dense than rock. The Earth would have less mass, and so we would feel less gravity.

My point is that if the Earth was hollow it could be easily measured and I'm if anyone has bothered to construct that proof.

20217825? ago

Yeah. But who knows how dense the ground actually is. Maybe there's an iron vein that spun into a toroid as well.