The above picture clearly shows that clouds occur [b]behind the sun[/b]. Before you say: "[i]KP, if the sun is that close airplanes would crash into it[/i]" remember: the sun is close, but not [b]that close[/b]. In Planar Models of [url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geodesy]Geodesy[/url], the sun is smaller and much closer to earth, [url=https://flatearthandthought.com/2017/01/17/question-how-do-daynight-cycles-and-seasons-work-on-a-flat-earth/]where it orbits above its surface[/url]. Even working off the conservative estimate of the sun being 3000 miles from the surface of the earth, and several hundred miles in diameter, this allows ample amounts of space for air craft (which rarely exceed 60,00 feet) to travel without any danger of colliding with the sun. The implications of photos such as the above should cast aside any doubt in the mind of a reasonable spherist. Unfortunately, the grip of mainstream science is iron strong, and evidence manifestly obvious to a 5 year old invariably gets dismissed by indoctrination and circular reasoning in more "enlightened" adults.
The picture also speaks volumes regarding the structure of earth's atmosphere. Obviously, the atmosphere is layered, with clouds occurring [b]both[/b] [i]in front[/i] and [i]behind[/i] the sun. Logically, the posterior (rear most) clouds are much larger and thicker than those occurring in front of the sun. It is the nearby clouds that we encounter while flying or climbing a tall mountain. The Sun orbits well beyond the nearest clouds, while the distant clouds are themselves well beyond the sun.
So why dont we often see clouds behind the sun during the afternoon? Upper atmosphere clouds (the thicker more distant ones) tend to occur along the more distant fringes of the disk of the earth. As the sun recedes in its daily orbit across the surface of the earth (causing the sun set), the angle of light (relative to the observer) reflects from the earth, illuminating the distant "thick" clouds.
This common, everyday picture completely blows heliocentric theory out of the water. The sun is clearly NOT massive OR distant. It is [i]smaller[/i] [b]and[/b] [i]closer[/i] to the surface of the Flat Earth.
P.S. Before you try to explain away these pictures due to photographic "bleeding" of the camera lens, please read my blog post about the Nearby Sun Hypothesis. I deal with this criticism at the end of the article:
https://flatearthandthought.com/2017/08/07/proof-behind-the-sun-flat-earth-sunsets/
Remember guys: [i]Trust Your Senses. They Are There [b]Because[/b] They Work[/i]
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No, just no