The Flat Earthers are confused as to why people and cities don't fall into space when they are on the planet's bottom.
In spite of thousands of years of established science, national news outlets like USA Today are still forced to debunk these kinds of outrageous claims, which are often spread via Facebook meme, which suggests that it is "scientifically impossiball" for the island of Manhattan to be.
Some parts of the world are at risk of falling off if Earth isn't a globe, according to the idiotic meme.
We don't experience the feeling of being "up" or "down" in space because of Earth, as USA Today emphasized as it sought to debunk this "wrongheaded" meme.
David Brown, a professor at North Carolina State University, told the newspaper that "true up" is always the direction opposite of the gravity. True down is always towards the center of Earth.
The physicist pointed out that anyone at the center of the disk would fall sideways if the planet were a flat surface.
"This is, one of many ways we know Earth is not flat," Brown said.
Flat Earthers are willing to ignore the evidence that Earth is round.
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