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Hawk_Yeah
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Hawk_Yeah
@hawk_yeah123
Fun with Flerfs! You’re not a true flerf until you go off at a tangent! #FlerfFreeFeb
England, United Kingdom Katılım Haziran 2021
129 Takip Edilen96 Takipçiler


@Vox_Aeon @EBagnatori @Danny494875 Legendary deflection, well done!
Now what was unnatural about the livestreams?
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@EBagnatori @Danny494875 How many hours a day do you spend arguing on flat earth pages?
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The famous Loch Ness “Surgeon’s Photo.”
1934 - Published in the Daily Mail, credited to London surgeon Dr. Robert Kenneth Wilson. For decades it was widely treated as the best photographic evidence of the Loch Ness Monster.
1994 - The truth finally came out. The “monster” was a small model mounted on a toy submarine, built by Christian Spurling as part of a hoax orchestrated by big-game hunter Marmaduke Wetherell.
So the most famous Nessie photograph in history?
A staged picture of a tiny model floating in a lake.
And yet the Loch Ness Monster legend continues just fine.
Because once something like a pop cryptid embeds itself in the public imagination, the evidence almost stops mattering.
The belief becomes the thing people defend - not the evidence that originally created it.
At that point the claim no longer lives in the realm of investigation or proof. It moves into identity, folklore, and personal conviction.
Debunking doesn’t kill it.
You can expose the hoax.
You can show the model.
You can name the people who built it.
You can document the confession.
None of it matters to someone who has already decided to believe.
Once an idea reaches that stage, it behaves like a zombie claim. It doesn’t survive because the evidence supports it. It survives because belief itself has taken over.
And belief, once established, can be remarkably resistant to facts, science, and reality. The claim has died but it keeps shambling on undead.
The Loch Ness Monster is one example.
Bigfoot and ETs are others.
Once a myth moves from evidence into belief, it becomes almost impossible to kill.



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@plain_see It’s a source of knowledge that doesn’t care what you believe in.
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@hawk_yeah123 Whatever it’s programmed to tell you must be true, I mean, it has to be, right?
I’ll bet you can’t find even one instance of a search engine or AI being incorrect, right?
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@ITSFLATDUMBASS @BrockRiddickIFB The machine that manufactured your tin foil hat would disagree.
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@BrockRiddickIFB Electrons don't exist, objectively. The atomic THEORY of matter is just that; more garbage theory taught as fact to children that don't even know HOW to question anything.
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@MikeStone411 @BrockRiddickIFB So this firmament thing is only capable of blocking electrons?
Got it.
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@BrockRiddickIFB It's called the firmament & its 400k feet high (75 miles)
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@BrockRiddickIFB You had all the answers you needed, why ask again or do you just enjoy being ripped to shreds each time? 😂🤡
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@SueSuemaria1 @Mitche2600 And you initial meme was generated how exactly?
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Hawk_Yeah retweetledi

This is the 100th time this account has posted the same flat Earth nonsense. It’s just a bot engagement farming. Flerfs are indeed this stupid, but it’s worse - they never ever post or comment anything original. The same stupid comments, same retarded memes, all failing at basic science or middle-school-level education.
Brock Riddick@BrockRiddickIFB
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@NatureScienceA1 You mixed up the word ‘rare’ with ‘ fake’
Try harder
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