Anonymous ID: 0c634c Aug. 6, 2020, 12:41 a.m. No.10197650   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>10197430

>Expanding earth?

No. Sorry.

The way we think of "gravity" is terribly flawed.

It's not related to "mass".

Well, that can play a role, too.

But "gravity" itself is a function of the Electromagnetic Force.

The surface of the Earth should be thought of as a Gaussian Sphere.

Whether or not our planet itself is "neutral" is practically irrelevant, because we are swimming in a sea of charges.

Charges from space don't immediately cancel when they react with Earth. Things like weather, volcanoes, and earthquakesare actually generated by the interactions between charges in space and that of the Earth.

 

Anyway, there are a couple different ideas, in regards to alternative theories about what "gravity" is. Wal Thornill does a decent job explaining a bit of the physics behind it. There is a cumulative dipole attraction acting on the particles themselves, which slightly skew the nucleus, if I understand that correctly.

 

The way I think of it, "gravity" is kind of like a "static cling" to the surface of our planet. The atmosphere can be thought of as a plate capacitor, only spherical. In that manner, there are things that could make "gravity" vary by significant amounts from that which we experience today, without the need for the Earth to expand or contract. If, for instance, our electrical environment was different, in space, that is, then that would create a different strength in the electric field generated between between Earth and space. Another thing that may or may not have played a significant role, I see evidence that suggests our planet was once tidally locked, similar to the way our moon is orbiting Earth. One side always facing toward us, with one side facing away. If that were the case, I'm certain the land-side, opposite of the ocean, would have been facing away from our parent star at all times, which believe it or not might have been different than the sun we are orbiting today.

 

That later arrangement would have been during the era when all the continents were part of one main landmass. Probably when dinosaurs roamed the Earth. I'm pretty sure our moon ended that epoch rather abruptly, and killed most of the dinosaurs. Think this is/was what started the whole "Creation" of "Day and Night". It's a theory at least…

Anonymous ID: 0c634c Aug. 6, 2020, 12:51 a.m. No.10197685   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>10197459

>God is universe, energy.

Closer

>Creators are aliens.

No. Think logically.

Who/what "created" the aliens?

Moar aliens?

Who/what "created" those aliens?

See? If not, keep re-reading above lines until you understand…

 

What gives someone "Life"?

Think about that for a second.

What gives motion to entire galaxies?

Same Force of Nature?

Do the words "Nature's God" mean anything to you?

They should if you value your Freedom…