Weird, because if it pulls on heavy oceans, you would think it would noticeably pull on light clouds.
Oceans as a whole are form fitted into place.
Oceans are liquid water with significant mass, but freedom to move. Wind causes waves, but not a significant constant height change in water (usually).
Clouds on the other hand are steam - gaseous water.
Can you blow steam away? Yes. the air currents in the cloud layers are hundred+kmph, so a small tug from the moon isn't going to really change how the clouds operate.
Why are the air currents moving at hundreds of kms/hr?
Trolling or for real?
A flat earther wouldn't accept the answer that the earth is rotating at 1000mph, so the jetstream being 100-200kmph and more doesn't make sense.
Flight times at 35000 feet are always adjusted due to the jetstream, sometimes taking up to 20% off the flight time with a good tail wind, or adding just as much (or using more fuel to keep on schedule) when fighting a headwind.
The hot and cold surfaces also create some wind conditions, like the huge winds that just hit the west coast last week.
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