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Flat Plane 2020

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Where is the Coriolis Effect when it rains or snows?

I think about this shit all the times when it rains and snows while presumably the Earth spins at 1000 MPH at the equator, think about that for a moment, it means the landmass you are standing on shifts counterclockwise one thousand miles every hour in relation to the Stars and we are told the Coriolis Effect as a result of the rotation of the Earth effects the atmosphere and all water and air currents and yet when it rains or snows both never fall sideways.


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Uploaded 4 years ago  

January 7th 2021  

Category: Technology & Science







5 Comments

Johannean

- 4 years ago  

Hint ; Compass and square it ! Hint; How do navigaters work a set path from a to b ? On a table !

Johannean

- 4 years ago  

The coriolis effect has been debunked! It's the Magnus effect ! Now do your calculations! The answer is sitting in plane sight behind the sun !

WaxingRadiance

- 4 years ago  

Find out how much a cubic metre of air weighs.

vjc

- 4 years ago  

First, there are no straight lines in nature. It's an illusion created by something called Frame of Reference. Second, any long range (>1000m +/-) shooter knows they have to account for something called the Coriolis Effect. If they don't, they miss the target. Personally, I'd enjoy reading a flat earth explanation for the Coriolis Effect.

The World Is Not Enough

- 4 years ago  

So in mainstream science that noone questions, nowdays, that Coriolis theory should mean that a helicopter hovering for about 3 hours, should land 3000miles AWAY from where it took off. Please provide such an experiment, and then we might believe in that story.