The sky is fascinating, if you're fortunate enough to live somewhere where you can see it well. I was just enthralled with it when I was a kid. These days, though, I live a few miles from Houston, Texas in the USA (Houston is one of the nation's largest cities), and I can see about ten stars. I'm exaggerating a little, but... it's pretty sad. Very hard to really make out the constellations, so there's really not a good way to "roadmap" the sky. It's a sad truth of the modern world that a large fraction of us live under such conditions, give how the trend toward urbanization has gone. Our ancestors had it much better - basically EVERYONE could look up at the sky and have a full appreciation of it.
@wuxlahero4948, the tides depend on where the moon is in the sky. When the moon is right over you or exactly opposite side of the Earth from you, it's high tide. When the moon is at the 90-degree points in between, it's low tide. So somehow that reverse side must be having you do something related to the moon.
I don't think it is appropriate to say they are not accurate. If they were bigger you could get minute accuracy on the sundial. And, accuracy, the sun is the ultimate time keeper.
Tip of the day: 3rd graders are smarter than you. Learn some basic math and do some simple experiments, like holding a ball in the sunlight and observing what the shadows do. (Yes. I know. You already have. The problem is that there is a MASSIVE operator error somewhere along the line.)
Furthermore, what's the big secret about? What does anyone have to gain by this MASSIVE lie and cover up? It used to be globally accepted that the Earth was flat. Life simply went on as usual. Why the change? To what end was this "ridiculous theory" pushed on us?
@@Trustee-of-The-Most-High Lmao. You guys are literally like arguing with a mentally disabled 5 year old with anger issues. I've found a long time ago that it isn't worth debating you people. Keep making yourself look stupid. I don't care one way or the other. 😂