How the Southern Stars Work on Flat Earth
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7
3 years ago
⁣Earth is a level motionless plane with the Sun, Moon and stars revolving
over and around us just as you experience every day. The North Pole is
the magnetic mono-pole center-point with Polaris, the North Pole star
situated directly above. Polaris is the only motionless star in the
heavens with all the other constellations revolving perfect circles over
the Earth every night. The so-called "planets," known to the ancients
as "wandering stars," were named such because they were observed then as
we can observe today to wander the heavens taking their own unique
spirograph-like patterns making both forward and retrograde motions over
and around the Earth during their cycles. Meanwhile the "fixed stars"
were named such because they were observed then as we can observe today
to stay fixed in their constellation patterns night after night, year
after year, century after century, never changing their relative
positions. If Earth was truly a tilting, wobbling, spinning space-ball
as NASA and modern astronomy proclaim, rotating 1000mph on its axis,
revolving 67,000mph around the Sun, spiraling 500,000mph around the
galaxy, and shooting off several million more mph through the universe,
the star patterns would never look the same two nights in a row, let
alone be fixed in exactly the same constellations for thousands upon
thousands of years!

The reality is that the Earth and Polaris do
not move, while everything else in the heavens revolves over Earth and
around Polaris East to West like in a planetarium dome. Our Earth
planetarium, however, is so vast that perspective won't allow any
observer to see all the stars simultaneously from any one vantage point.
We can see Polaris, Ursa Major/Minor and other Northern constellations
from every point North of the equator simultaneously, but conversely
cannot see the so-called South Pole Star - Sigma Octantis, the Southern
Cross or other outer constellations simultaneously from every point
South of the equator, because they all sweep over a great southern arc
from their rise in the evening to their setting in the morning. Facing
North, the stars turn counter-clockwise, from right to left, facing
South they turn clock-wise, from left to right, facing East they rise in
front and set behind, while facing West they rise behind and set in
front. So their apparent motion, angle and inclination changes depending
where you are on Earth and what direction you are facing, but their
actual movement is always East to West.

To learn more about our flat, motionless Earth, please visit:
http://www.EricDubay.com
http://www.AtlanteanConspiracy.com
http://www.IFERS.123.st
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