They might be in for a surprise… Flat Earthers are planning a trip to Antarctica in 2020 to reach the ‘end of the world’
- Flat Earth theorists will embark on a cruise in 2020 to see ‘the end of the world’
- Heliocentrism, the flat-earthers claim, is a widespread government conspiracy
- Cruise ships use equipment that relies on a spherical model of Earth to navigate
A prominent group of conspiracy theorists who believe that the Earth is flat will embark on a cruise to Antarctica next year to visit what they consider the ‘end of the world.’
According to the Flat Earth International Conference (FEIC), which is not associated with the Flat Earth Society, the organization will embark sometime in 2020, traveling to Antarctica by sea for its annual event.
An upcoming conference for the group will be held in Dallas, Texas in November and marks the third annual event hosted by the FEIC.
Some flat Earth theorists believe that the earth is a disc shape, surrounded by an ice wall (Antarctica). An artist’s impression of a flat Earth is pictured
A representative for the group did not respond to a request for more details before publication.
Since the group’s announcement about plans to host 2020’s conference aboard a cruise ship, the idea has been singled out by some for its irony, given that cruise ships navigate their surroundings using equipment based on a spherical model of the Earth.
Global Position Systems (GPS) in particular use a network of satellites that orbit the Earth to ping off of each other and pinpoint one’s location.
In a report by The Guardian, Henk Keijer, a longtime cruise ship captain gives his thoughts on the FEIC’s plans.
‘I have sailed 2 million miles, give or take,’ Keijer told The Guardian. ‘I have not encountered one sea captain who believes the Earth is flat.’
The Flat Earth International Conference is part of a rising tide of groups who reject the heliocentric model of the Earth and claim that our planet — instead of an oblate spheroid — is actually a disk or dome-like shape and that Antarctica surrounds the perimeter to form a kind of ice wall.
To bolster their theory, some flat-Earthers have also endorsed other conspiracies, including claims that the U.S. faked its moon landing and that NASA has worked to obscure the truth about outer space and our planet’s place in it.
As the flat Earth movement gains traction, it has also caught the attention of documentarians looking to both profile and in some cases debunk the ideas set forth by groups like the Flat Earth Society.
Recent additions to the sphere include Netflix’s ‘Behind the Curve’ and an upcoming ‘documentary’ by controversial YouTube star, Logan Paul, titled ‘Flat Earth: to the Edge and Back,’ which appears to show Paul succumbing to flat Earth conspiracies.
Paul’s film will be released on March 20.
The Flat Earth International Conference is part of a rising tide of groups who reject the heliocentric model of the Earth and claim that our planet — instead of an oblate spheroid — is actually a disk or dome-like shape and that Antarctica surrounds the perimeter
The prominence of flat Earth conspiracies has been amplified by the increasing popularity of internet conspiracy theorists who grow their audiences on popular video hosting platforms like YouTube.
In a recent study from researchers at Texas Tech University found that of the 30 respondents interviewed at a Flat Earth event, all but one identified YouTube as a major factor in how they came to believe the theories.
Some parties have called on the streaming service to tweak its algorithm in order to stem the spread of misinformation and prioritize reliable science, a call YouTube has begun to heed in recent months.
‘We recently announced that we’ll begin reducing recommendations of borderline content or videos that could misinform users in harmful ways—such as videos promoting a phony miracle cure for a serious illness, claiming the earth is flat, or making blatantly false claims about historic events like 9/11,’ a YouTube representative told Mail Online in February.