Dalisclock said:
Which then begs the questions: Where are the edges of the disc?
Because I've personally crossed the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and didn't see any drop offs anywhere.
This has come up somewhat in the thread before. The circumference of the Earth disc is lined with massive ice walls which are secretly patrolled by the world governments to keep people away, apparently so succesfully that no one has managed to get within viewing distance and got to tell about it.
I'd say this shows Flat Earthers have no sense of scale either, you know, aside from all other mental faculties they seem to lack. The Earth is tiny on even an interplanetary scale, let alone interstellar, but still pretty massive from a human perspective, with a surface area of some 510 million square km. If you were to turn that into a disc you'd get a circumference of about
80 000 km, if my shitty math is correct. That's pretty fucking long.
To put things into perspective, the most well-guarded border in the world is probably the Korean Demilitarized Zone. Exact numbers are hard to find, but it's estimated that roughly two-thirds of North Korea's 1 million strong active military personel is stationed at the DMZ. A big chunk of South Korea's 625 000 strong military is also guarding it, supplemented by the vast majority of 23 000 US troops. I wouldn't be surprised if the total number of personel dedicated to watching the DMZ is close to a million.
The DMZ is
only 250 km long. And people have still managed to slip through. Very few, but it has happened. 4 times in the past 4 years actually.
Now imagine what it would take to do something like that, except the border is
320 times longer. How much manpower, materiel and money? Over decades, perhaps even centuries? And do it with an apparently perfect record?