Is this even a question in 2017 ? Sure earth is flat
And why not, a very urgent issue
Maybe all around us are deceiving and only the cosmonauts know the truth about the fact that the earth is still flat
Yes my friend, the Earth is still a flat and motionless plane. People weren't idiots for ten thousand years then suddenly woke up five hundred years ago no, they were put to sleep!
FE is something that was advertised in the Middle Ages. It was taught to the people by the Roman Catholic Church, just to keep the people under control and ignorant.
Halloween is a holiday that was actually started by the Roman Catholic Church and set in place at the end of October. Why October? Because the Reformation of the Church done by Martin Luther 500 years ago opened the eyes of the people to the dictatorial rule done by the Roman Catholic Church. And the date that Luther nailed his 95 statements against the Church to the door of the chapel in Wittenberg, was October 31.
This year we a celebrating the 500th birthday of this beginning of the Reformation. And here these FE people are trying to take us back into ignorance with their FE garbage.
Before the Roman Catholic Church the people knew that the earth was a globe. After the Roman Catholic dark ages the people have known that the earth is a globe. And now some jokers want to take us back into ignorance by starting the FE thing all over again. Do you think they are paid by the Roman Catholic Church?
Wow, 500 years ago. Someone was on NPR talking about the importance of this man (to the speaker), so your post caught my attention.
"On 31 October 1517, Luther wrote to his bishop, Albrecht von Brandenburg, protesting the sale of indulgences. He enclosed in his letter a copy of his "Disputation of Martin Luther on the Power and Efficacy of Indulgences", which came to be known as the Ninety-five Theses. Hans Hillerbrand writes that Luther had no intention of confronting the church, but saw his disputation as a scholarly objection to church practices, and the tone of the writing is accordingly "searching, rather than doctrinaire."[32] Hillerbrand writes that there is nevertheless an undercurrent of challenge in several of the theses, particularly in Thesis 86, which asks: "Why does the pope, whose wealth today is greater than the wealth of the richest Crassus, build the basilica of St. Peter with the money of poor believers rather than with his own money?"[32]"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Luther#Start_of_the_Reformation