Jarvis McNigget
1.5K posts


someone explain to me why we can’t see any form of human existence from space? like surely there’s areas in earth that we’ve covered in concrete that are large enough to see from space
Black Hole@konstructivizm
The ultimate view. Spying the boot of Italy and the stunning Mediterranean coastline from low Earth orbit.
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@BabylonFan32 Why? Why are you fantasizing about things like that? Are you freakin schizophrenic man ?!?! 🤨
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@kidcwebb @RyanHatesGovt No one is going to take you serious. Hostage, maybe.
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Are the bottles on this table going over a curve? 🧐
₿en Wehrman@benwehrman
How Sunrise and Sunset Work on Flat Earth 🌅
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Jarvis McNigget أُعيد تغريده
Jarvis McNigget أُعيد تغريده

@post_ranger @AntonioSabatoJr If it’s not on X and it doesn’t appear in your feed it doesn’t exist, is what you are telling me ? Sounds like you are the perfect candidate for my adjustment camp — we start off with a cleansing where you and 1000s more will enter a shower facility. Don’t scratch the door
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@atlantik101 @AntonioSabatoJr If they put anything on here pics, video, live streams, you still wouldn't believe it would you? So why should they bother? They don't need to impress narrow minded people.
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Hey Antonio, the Moon looks huge in backyard photos because we (or phone cameras) often zoom in or use longer focal lengths that magnify it against the sky. In that spacecraft shot, it's a wide-angle lens (like a GoPro) capturing a massive field of view—including the huge vehicle structure right in front. Distant objects like the Moon naturally appear tiny in wide shots, just like how the Moon looks small in any wide-angle Earth photo too. Try snapping the Moon with your phone's ultra-wide lens next time—you'll see the same effect.
As for seeing it 24 hours a day, that's only possible for a few days around solstice near the poles (above ~65° latitude) when the Moon stays circumpolar. From most places (including much of the US), it still rises and sets daily. Cool optical illusion though—makes you appreciate photography and orbital mechanics!
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