![]() * T-shirts size 3XL+ are available in basic colours only: white, black, red, blue, navy, heather grey GILDAN Softstyle or Ultra Cotton: (we can use this upon request): If you have a preference then let us know which garment brand you prefer. We use GILDAN and FRUIT OF THE LOOM garments, depending on color chosen and availability. IF YOUR SIZE IS NOT LISTED JUST MESSAGE US WITH YOUR REQUIRED SIZE PROFESSIONALLY DESIGNED & PRINTED ON PREMIUM QUALITY BRANDED GARMENT Superb garment and print quality, buy with confidence! where is the curve ? please explain this /YCJVBdOWX7- B.o.Flat Earth Society has members all around the globe "It is always good to question 'how we know what we know'," Christine Garwood, author of Flat Earth: The History of an Infamous Idea, tells Brendan O'Neill for the BBC. "But it is also good to have the ability to accept compelling evidence-such as the photographs of Earth from space." ![]() But it didn’t last: By the time Johnson died, the society had dwindled again to just 100 members.The Flat Earth Society is still around, though they remain little more than a tiny fringe group. While most of the articles about Johnson and his fringe beliefs were written with tongue firmly in cheek, he channeled his odd sort of fame into increasing membership in the Flat Earth Society (as well as a starring role in an ice cream commercial). Ironically, Johnson lived just over the hill from Edwards Air Force Base in southern California-the facility where the Air Force tests experimental aircraft, and where NASA’s Space Shuttles landed after returning to Earth. "The Space Shuttle is a joke-and a very ludicrous joke." "You can't orbit a flat earth," Johnson told Robert J. Schadewald for Science Digest in 1980. In his newsletters, Johnson wrote off such spectacles like the sunrise and sunset as optical illusions, discussed how Charles Lindbergh proved the Earth was flat, and claimed that NASA and the moon landing were nothing but hoaxes, Eddy writes. Similarly, Johnson’s wife Marjory believed that the Earth must be flat, because otherwise she would have spent her childhood in her native Australia hanging upside-down by her toes, Martin wrote at the time.ĭuring his tenure as president of the Flat Earth Society, its ranks swelled to about 3,500 people. ''If earth were a ball spinning in space, there would be no up or down,'' Johnson told David Gates and Jennifer Smith for Newsweek in 1984. He made waves in the national media and became known for cheerfully insisting the rest of the world was being duped by scientists, Douglas Martin wrote in Johnson’s obituary for the New York Times in 2001. Johnson’s good friend Samuel Shenton founded a small fringe group dubbed the Flat Earth Society in the 1950s. In 1972 Johnson became the president of the society after Shenton's death, transforming the group from a small collection of conspiracy theorists into an organization with thousands of members. Back in the 1970s and ‘80s, a man named Charles Kenneth Johnson became a minor celebrity for his refusal to believe the Earth is round, Cheryl Eddy writes for iO9. But this wasn't the first resurgance of the idea. So many were surprised to hear the flat Earth concept still kicked around. People have known that the Earth is round since at least the sixth century B.C.E. Since then, the rapper has drawn the ire of all sorts of incredulous people, including astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson. took to Twitter and proclaimed that the Earth is flat. This week, a particularly odd little bit of pseudoscience reared its head again when rapper B.o.B.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |