Thunder Proves Flat Earth
Today I’m going to show you why thunder proves the dome above us. Thunder needs to hit a solid object to occur—you can’t have thunder without a starting point. This is easy to demonstrate.
There is a good example of what I mean. First, bring out my Van de Graaff generator, then fill a bottle with water and place that on top of the Van de Graaff generator. I turn the Van de Graaff on, and this happens.
The sound of the thunder proves that there is a dome above us because thunder doesn’t produce multiple explosions. Rather, it produces one explosion sound. They call the thunder sound a “thunderclap” because it sounds like a clap, but that clap has echoes to it, which make it sound like multiple sounds.
In order to have an echo, you need to be inside a closed area because sound waves need to hit an object for an echo to occur. Here is a video of a guy blowing a balloon inside a nuclear power plant. When slowed down, it sounds just like thunder.
Light travels much faster than sound waves—that’s why we see lightning occur before the thunder sound.
There are so many pieces of evidence for the dome: sun dogs, rainbows, and thunder are some of the ones that prove the firmament above us. The Earth is flat, closed, and stationary. Space is fake.
Thank you for watching. Please share this video so more people know about this.
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