@AlwaysWrightDM@truthache68 Until you can see what Earth is, nothing I say to you will make sense. Your mind is already made up. This is decades old stuff. You can go do the research for yourself otherwise its pointless to tell you. You know this to be true, its what all of you do.
Here we have the classic "star trails flip" puzzle that trips up so many people—why do northern stars circle counterclockwise around Polaris, yet southern ones appear to spin the opposite way around a southern point?
It's not two separate poles or a spinning ball—it's pure perspective on a flat plane under a dome-firmament.
As you move south, Polaris sinks toward the horizon. Past the equator, you’re looking “outward” towards the edge, so the same counterclockwise motion around the central north pole gets optically flipped in appearance—like viewing a spinning record from the far side through a curved lens.
Mind-bending proof the sky isn't two hemispheres on a globe—it's one unified circuit above a stationary plane. Stars don't "change direction." Instead, your position just warps how the motion projects.
Wake up to the optical trick they've sold as "opposite hemispheres." Reality might just be simpler, stranger, and way more elegant.
Engineers are targeting 8 pm ET on Thursday, March 19, for rollout of Artemis II.
NASA’s crawler-transporter 2 will carry the 11-million-pound stack at about 1 mph along the four-mile route from the Vehicle Assembly Building at @NASAKennedy to the launch pad.