WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2026 Poal.co

837

Mountains in the distance don't shine, why would the moon shine? In fact, the level of detail we see on the moon alone should tell you its self illuminating. Mountains in the distance lose detail, and they "allegedly" (according to nasa) have less air between them and the observer.

The moon isnt made of mirrors or highly reflective material.

Nasa lies. Moon is a light in the firmament just like the sun. Theyre the same size. Nasa tells you thats just random chance. Yeah right.

Mountains in the distance don't shine, why would the moon shine? In fact, the level of detail we see on the moon alone should tell you its self illuminating. Mountains in the distance lose detail, and they "allegedly" (according to nasa) have less air between them and the observer. The moon isnt made of mirrors or highly reflective material. Nasa lies. Moon is a light in the firmament just like the sun. Theyre the same size. Nasa tells you thats just random chance. Yeah right.

(post is archived)

[–] 0 pt

Its optics. Moon and sun are same size. And mountains become washed out in the distance

[–] 1 pt

Its optics. Moon and sun are same size.

And since I can cover up either one of them by holding up my thumb, it's bigger than either one? God, you're stupid even for a tranny.