Join The Higherside Chats podcast, as host Greg Carlwood, talks Flat Earth, early explorers and the mysterious polar regions with guest, Jeran Campanella.
We know by now that the campaign of disinformation stretches like a spider web, intricately woven and designed to catch the unwitting.
But, trying to avoid the trap can be a seemingly daunting task when taking into account just how much of our understanding of reality is based on a carefully crafted narrative, littered with lies and deception.
Yes, beginning from our early years, we spend our days in school where our creativity and critical thinking are slowly stripped away and replaced with recited facts from history books written by a nefarious few pushing their own degenerate agenda.
We spend the crucial years of our youth being stuffed with inaccuracy, only to turn to the rabbit holes of the internet to help reshape our perspective and better understand this crazy universe that our rock, Earth, floats through.
And, fortunately today's guest, Jeran Campanella joins The Higherside to discuss one of the pariahs of conspiracy : Flat Earth Theory.
2:50 Starting at square one, Greg and Jeran first discuss the obvious flaws of the official narrative, by examining the role of N.A.S.A, the work of mainstream physicists such as, George Ellis, the fact that much of cosmology is based on philosophical notions and that space is a mathematical construct.
15:42 After covering the various holes in the mainstream paradigm of the heliocentric model, Greg and Jeran deconstruct how such an enormous lie has withstood the test of time. They discuss some interesting abnormalities in career fields such as surveyors, and how these irregularities support the Flat Earth model. They also examine the role of mainstream figures such as Neil DeGrasse Tyson, and the spiritual implications of the Flat Earth model.
31:56 We are all familiar with the age old phrase by Oscar Wilde "Life imitates Art far more than Art imitates Life", and the impact of science fiction on real science is no different. Greg and Jaren discuss Arthur C. Clarke's prediction regarding satellite technology,