Blog September 11, 2025

Tides Debunk Gravity: Why the Moon Theory Makes No Sense

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The Official Story

We’re told ocean tides happen because the moon’s gravity pulls on Earth’s oceans. Supposedly, the side of Earth closest to the moon bulges with water, creating high tide. But then, oddly, the opposite side also bulges, creating another high tide.

Right away, the explanation makes little sense. How can the moon pull on water on the far side of Earth at the same time it pulls on the near side?


Contradictions in the Moon Theory

  1. Selective Pulling: If the moon’s gravity is strong enough to move trillions of tons of ocean water, why doesn’t it pull equally on lakes, ponds, or even your own body’s water?

  2. Two High Tides: If the moon is pulling water toward it, there should only be one high tide directly under the moon. The “second bulge” theory is pure speculation.

  3. No Consistency: Some areas of the world barely have tides, while others experience extreme changes. If the moon controls tides, why are they not uniform worldwide?

  4. Sun’s Gravity Ignored: If the sun’s gravity is supposedly far stronger than the moon’s, why isn’t it the main driver of tides?

The more you examine the gravity-tide explanation, the weaker it becomes.


The Flat Earth Perspective

On a flat Earth, tides are not caused by magical invisible forces pulling oceans. They are a natural, observable phenomenon influenced by the local motion of the sun and moon over Earth’s plane.

Their paths, energy, and cycles interact with the waters — creating predictable, regional tides without resorting to contradictory theories.

Instead of a “pull,” tides are the result of design: a natural rhythm built into the world we live on.


Why the Gravity Story Exists

Gravity is the glue holding the globe myth together. Without it, the spinning ball model collapses. That’s why even absurd claims — like the moon pulling oceans but not lakes, or causing two high tides at once — are defended with blind faith.

The tide story is not about explaining reality. It’s about protecting gravity, and by extension, the globe.


Conclusion

Tides are real. But the moon-gravity explanation is not. The contradictions expose how fragile the globe model really is:

  • Selective forces that work only when convenient.

  • Impossible bulges explained by speculation.

  • Ignoring evidence that doesn’t fit the script.

On a flat Earth, tides make sense as natural cycles, not as proof of invisible magic.

The Earth is flat. The oceans rise and fall in rhythm — and tides debunk gravity.



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