Los Angeles Times

Yes, they believe the Earth is flat

Colorado is a hub for those who think the science of the globe is just a conspiracy.

- By David Kelly Kelly is a special correspond­ent.

GOLDEN, Colo. —Moving with missionary zeal, Nathan Thompson swept into a brewpub here bearing a battered globe under his arm with the words “this is a scam” scrawled on the side.

He dropped the defaced orb like a vanquished enemy on a table amid pints of beer.

“They say we are cult,” he announced, “but the globe is the biggest cult of all.”

Thompson, the 31-yearold host of the Official Flat Earth Globe & Discussion group on Facebook, was guest of honor at the night’s flat Earth meet-up. Clad in a green jumpsuit festooned with flat Earth maps, he worked the room hard all the while proclaimin­g Earth is less a big blue marble than a big blue pancake.

A 16-year-old boy approached and said his friend had started a GoFundMe campaign to prove the world is a disk. Moments later a middle-aged man declared, “Earth is flat, not spheroid!” Thompson beamed. “This is not a conspiracy theory,” he said. “This is a conspiracy fact.”

With more people rejecting traditiona­l sources of informatio­n and the internet giving rise to a variety of alternativ­e worldviews, the granddaddy of all conspiracy theories is enjoying a renaissanc­e and Colorado is the epicenter.

Thousands of YouTube videos claim the world is f lat, gravity is uncertain, space is fake and the curvature of the planet is an illusion. Followers say this ruse is perpetuate­d by a powerful cabal determined to make humans feel small and powerless.

A conspirato­rial mindset and a deep current of religious ideology permeate the movement, which preaches that Earth was created by design. As evidence of its shape, some reference Bible verses touting “the four corners of the Earth” and Earth being God’s “footstool.”

Many of the most popular flat Earth videos come out of Colorado, host of next year’s Flat Earth Internatio­nal Conference along with the Colorado Internatio­nal Flat Earth Film Festival.

Mark Sargent, a software analyst from Boulder now living in Seattle, is the primary organizer of the movement and has made over 1,000 videos. He believes Colorado’s open-mindedness accounts for its prominent position among believers.

Back in 2015, when he typed “flat Earth” into YouTube he’d get 50,000 hits. Now it’s more than 18.7 million, beating out Lady Gaga and closing in on Donald Trump. Sargent said he suspects millions of believers remain “in the closet” to avoid ridicule. “My channel broke 10 million views in December,” he said. “This is my fulltime job now.”

Sargent, 49, became a believer after watching videos and realizing he could “no longer prove the globe.”

The flat Earth revival, he said, can be explained in large part by YouTube, increased skepticism of authority and the message of hope it conveys.

“You’re not on a tiny little speck of rock just flying through this endless, incomprehe­nsible universe and you are not small,” said Sargent, who believes Earth is beneath a dome. “It was built just for you. All the world is a stage and you’re in it. You are on a ride. Part stage, part terrarium, part planetariu­m. Whatever it is, it is very deliberate.”

The concept of a flat Earth goes back to the Bronze Age. Later on, Greek philosophe­rs and mathematic­ians like Ptolemy, Aristotle and Pythagoras used calculatio­ns and observatio­ns of Earth’s curved shadow on the moon during lunar eclipses to conclude the planet was round.

Yet millennium­s later that still doesn’t sit well for some.

One of the nation’s first meet-ups dedicated to the flat Earth cause convenes weekly at the Purple Cup Cafe in Fort Collins.

John Vnuk started it in 2016 and soon received more than 200 calls from people eager to know more.

“I suspect there are more people open to the idea of flat Earth then we think,” he said. “We had a multitude of engineers attend our meeting … who just would rather have a peaceful life with full employment than join the battle.”

At a recent meeting, Nathan Nichols, 39, rattled off “proofs” for a tabular Earth. He said it looks curved from high altitudes because of wide-angle camera lenses. Ships disappear over the horizon because of the limits of human vision.

Some members believe Earth is surrounded by a wall of ice holding back the seas while others suspect it’s an infinite plane. Circumnavi­gating the world, they explain, is simply traveling in a big circle.

“I don’t know the motivation for hiding the truth,” Nichols said. “The sobering part of this is that you have been lied to.”

As conspiraci­es go, this one is remarkably nonpartisa­n, said Joseph Uscinski, author of the book “American Conspiracy Theories.”

“Just like some have a left- or right-wing worldview, some people have a conspirato­rial worldview where they think every institutio­n is a liar,” he said.

The Los Angeles-based Independen­t Investigat­ions Group, which looks into claims of the paranormal and pseudoscie­nce, plans a test in the coming weeks at the Salton Sea hoping to convince a group of flat Earthers. They will fire a laser eight feet above the water to a target on the other side. “If the Earth is flat the laser will stay at eight feet the whole way,” said Spencer Marks, an investigat­or with the group. “If it’s curved, it will descend toward the surface of the water.”

Marks has debated flat Earthers, but he’s not a scientist. In fact, few scientists have weighed in.

“Science doesn’t even get their arguments out there,” Sargent said. “They try to beat us with math, but people don’t understand it. It might as well be static, so they listen to me.”

David Falk, assistant professor of astronomy at Los Angeles Valley College, thinks that’s a mistake. “The serious science community feels it’s so basic that they don’t want to waste their time debunking it,” he said. “But ... the danger isn’t that people don’t believe the Earth is round; it’s the lack of scientific literacy.”

Back at the Golden pub, Bob Knodel, a 57-year-old engineer whose “Globebuste­rs” series has more than 2.6 million views on YouTube, held forth on the flat Earth universe. “The sun is about 3,419.5 miles away by my calculatio­ns. It’s not a burning ball of hydrogen gas; it is electrosta­tic energy,” he said. “We don’t know how it’s powered.”

Brian Gegan, 55 and not a flat Earther, wandered over.

“So you believe the Earth is flat and stationary?” he asked.

Thompson jumped in: “We don’t believe, we know. We live in a closed system. The Earth is not spinning. What would keep us on it if it was spinning so fast?” “Gravity,” said Gegan. “Gravity has never been proven,” Thompson said.

Gegan asked why it would be hidden.

“They want to dissuade you from the idea of a God,” Knodel said. “Beyond that, as a way to control your mind. They want us to think that we aren’t special, but we are.”

Gegan walked away unconvince­d.

 ?? David Kelly For The Times ?? “THEY want to dissuade you from the idea of a God,” says Bob Knodel, 57.
David Kelly For The Times “THEY want to dissuade you from the idea of a God,” says Bob Knodel, 57.

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