"The difference between us is I need to insult you exactly 0 times or hurl a single word of abuse to your side to win. Your side only wins via intimidation and bullying via authority/genetic fallacy and ad hominem attacks."
XD ok... let's see what YOU are able to prove. I'll insult you later ;)
3:38 of your video: "to abandon your senses and everyday experiences in order to believe in science stuff is wrong..."
Our senses are not to be relied on as an objective measure of reality so it's wrong to say scientific ideas are incorrect because they don't make sense to you. Your senses evolved on and are tailored to the plains of sub-Saharan Africa and similar, designed to make sense of what our ancestors encountered there, not to understand space, celestial objects, etc on a level that wasn't needed. Rejecting scientific ideas on the basis of them not making sense to us is inherently wrong.
5:31-6:01: "when we zoom out, it appears to go down... zoom in, it goes up and is more visible"... "the sun doesn't go over any horizon... it's simply too far away to see when it's night time"
Ok, so this suggests that the sun is always visible, the horizon on a lake or ocean never obstructs it(relatively flat areas that the video creator used to demonstrate his point), it's just too far away to see and, by using various devices to increase our visual range, the sun will become visible once more.
Let's say that the sun disappears from your view with the naked eye at 6:00 pm. You use your video recorder, as the video does, to zoom in on the 'horizon'. Are you suddenly going to see the sun reappear as you've zoomed in on the horizon? 30 minutes pass and the video recorder can't zoom in any further and loses the sun... it's now too far away... are you going to break out various telescopes, increasing in power, every time the sun disappears from view? Shell out some serious money and you should be able to see the sun 24/7 if you have a strong enough telescope... buy the right telescope and range shouldn't be an issue.
I see this as a very simple experiment one can do at home, waiting until the sun 'disappears' over the horizon and then using a telescope or a video recorder to make the sun magically reappear by zooming in. After all, the sun never disappears over a relatively flat horizon, right?
What you can do is find yourself an area with a relatively flat horizon and record the sun's setting. When it disappears, zoom in and make it reappear. Upload your video for the world to see.
Also, the video does not disprove the picture I linked... the picture clearly shows the shadow the mountains cast on the clouds as the sun disappears below the horizon. Your video says the sun never disappears but merely gets too far away to be seen. A sunset caused by the sun's light fading due to
range will not cause a shadow to be cast upwards.
This video[
www.youtube.com/watch?v=gseNeL_Rung] serves the purpose of showing that the Earth is always BELOW the sun according to the flat earth model. All of the light that lands on the Earth is pointing downwards to some degree no matter the range. Distant mountains are not able to cast shadows that go upwards unless the sun goes below the horizon causing them to cast shadows that go up.
I literally just tested this myself with my phone's flash light and a bottle of hand sanitizer. Having the light source ABOVE the bottle, but merely moving it away results in a shadow that is cast on the ground(or my bed) that merely lengthens until it is subsumed by the increasing darkness of a light source that is becoming more distant. The light source never goes below the bottle/bed. As a result, the shadow never gets directed upwards. However, using the edge of the bed as a horizon on which the sun goes over and sets and using a notebook to function as the clouds, the bottle casts a shadow exactly like the mountains on the shadow.
Do it yourself... you will get the same results.
Antartica... earlier in this thread, you said that "you can take a helicopter near it just high enough to avoid the harsh winds and to see barely into it".
So, essentially, one isn't really seeing anything of Antartica... it's a distant place never to be reached. Explain to me how there is a lot of documentation of Antarctica's wildlife if one can barely see into it let alone get to the place and study it up close? If nothing lives there, where do they live that would enable us to know so much about them?