🌕 Let’s talk about the eclipse they don’t want you thinking about: SELENELION.
A selenelion is when the Sun and Moon are visible at the same time during a lunar eclipse.
Wait—hold up.
A lunar eclipse means the Earth is directly between the Sun and the Moon, casting a shadow on the Moon.
So how in the multiverse are the Sun and Moon both above the horizon at the same time?!
They’re supposed to be in a straight line — Sun ➝ Earth ➝ Moon.
💀 That’s checkmate right there. Geometry doesn’t lie, unless NASA drew it.
🧢 Globe Earth Copium:
They cry “apparent position,” like the light bends over the horizon due to refraction, so it only looks like both are up.
But come on.
So you’re telling me millions of people around the world are all hallucinating the same sun and moon in the sky at the same time?
Even worse?
👉 The Earth’s shadow hits the Moon from the top down during these eclipses.
Uhh… if the Earth was blocking the Sun from below, the shadow should rise from the bottom up.
Top-down shadow = ✖ globe FAIL.
🔍 Final Thought:
- Moon is visible.
- Sun is visible.
- Earth is supposedly between them.
- Shadow hits the Moon from the wrong direction.
💥 Either physics broke or the globe did.