What I did, I started measuring the speed of the moon by setting up a camera in my back garden, and I used a compass app… What about the research you presented at the conference? When I refer to flat earth, I’m not talking about a pizza floating in outer space, I’m referring to there being no measurable curvature over large bodies of water. When I put it into the actual calculator, which calculates how much curvature there should be between Skegness and Cromer, it shouldn’t have been visible at all, and yet it was clearly visible. I asked a taxi driver about it and he told me the coastal town of Cromer was right on the tip at the very end, so I looked at how many miles it actually was from Skegness, and it was about 39 miles away… I got the opportunity to go to Skegness and I was looking across the beach and I could see the Norfolk coastline to the very tip. If you’d already seen 200 proofs and been convinced by Flat Earth theory, what inspired you to start doing your own research? I clicked on one, I think it was Eric Dubay’s “200 Proofs Earth Is Not A Spinning Ball”, and after about the ninth proof, I was basically convinced, because the truth is undeniable. As I was looking deeper and deeper into the moon landings, I noticed a lot of recommended videos popping up related to flat earth. I think it was round about November 2015 and like a lot of people late at night, I’d just been researching, looking at different things – mainly, I was looking at the moon landings. Hi David, when did you first become a flat earther? The 45-year-old claimed that his research “destroys big bang cosmology” and “supports the idea that gravity doesn’t exist.” At Britain’s first Flat Earth Convention – held between 27 to 29 April in Birmingham – Marsh was one of nine speakers who presented their findings to 200 flat earthers. Last weekend, David Marsh proved that gravity doesn’t exist.
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