Quote:
Originally Posted by Sundancefisher
The moon doesn't spin therefore you can't proce its a ball...however I can prove looking up that it is a round flat plate. Just like the Earth is seen by the man on the moon.
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Actually the Moon does spin, at the perfect rate as to always present one side to Earth. It is also 400 times closer to Earth than the Sun and 400 times smaller.That`s why we get perfect coverage during an eclipse, the only know sun, planet, moon system event known to exist. Just for fun, Venus spins the other way to all the other planets and Jupiter has a moon that circles clockwise, opposite to the other 66 moons. Oh, and Uranas spins on it` side. Wonder what happened there. And Jupiter is in exactly the right place to intercept 99.9 % of the crap that would hit Earth. Somethings just make you think. One day when I`m real drunk it will hit me. Then I`ll forget when I wake up.