Flat Earth Rocketeer Once Again Fails to Launch Himself Into the Sky at 500 Mph

In this photograph taken Nov. fifteen, Mike Hughes stands beside his steam-powered rocket, which he built from salvaged parts. Waldo Stakes/HO courtesy of Mad Mike Hughes via AP hide explanation

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Waldo Stakes/HO courtesy of Mad Mike Hughes via AP

In this photo taken Nov. 15, Mike Hughes stands abreast his steam-powered rocket, which he built from salvaged parts.

Waldo Stakes/HO courtesy of Mad Mike Hughes via AP

On Sabbatum, a limousine driver plans to launch himself on a mile-long flight over the Mojave Desert in a rocket of his ain making.

His name is "Mad" Mike Hughes, his steam-powered rocket is built of salvaged metals, his launch pad is repurposed from a used mobile home — and he is confident this will mark the kickoff step toward proving the Earth is flat, afterward all.

"It's the near interesting story in the world," Hughes told The Associated Press of his jury-rigged quest to overturn more than two millennia of scientific knowledge. And the whole affair is costing him just $20,000, according to the AP. (It goes without maxim, but nosotros'll say this anyway: Practice not try this at home — or anywhere.)

"I don't believe in science," Hughes added. "I know about aerodynamics and fluid dynamics and how things motility through the air, most the sure size of rocket nozzles, and thrust. Simply that'due south not science, that's simply a formula. At that place's no divergence between science and science fiction."

The plan, as stated, is to send himself ane,800 anxiety high in the air at a speed of 500 mph earlier finally pulling out his parachutes — which, one hopes, will not exist the same ones he used for another launch in 2014. Hughes, 61, told a apartment-Earth community Spider web show that the flight, which the AP said took him a quarter-mile beyond Arizona desert, ended when he pulled his parachutes — ii of which he said were at to the lowest degree 20 years erstwhile at the time and 1 of which didn't open.

"Yes, it was a scary moment," he said in the interview, adding that he had to use a walker for several weeks subsequently his landing. "I had never parachuted before."

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It was not his first fourth dimension tinkering with a large hunk of metallic, all the same. Though Hughes may drive limousines for a living, he says he has worked in NASCAR pit crews, and The Washington Mail service reports he "has been building rockets for years."

Just don't liken the man's entrepreneurial spirit to that of Elon Musk, who "is a giant fraud," according to Hughes. In fact, many notable infinite explorers came in for Hughes' criticism during the interview, including the "Freemason" NASA astronauts John Glenn and Neil Armstrong. Hughes maintained that all of them have been involved in "the roots of the deception" that the Earth is round.

Now, it must be noted that humans knew the world was round long, long before NASA launched astronauts into space and we saw pictures of our spherical planet from distant. As the BBC points out, Aristotle — a Greek human being with no known connections to NASA or Freemasonry — explained how we know dorsum effectually 350 B.C.:

"Again, our observations of the stars make it evident, not only that the Globe is circular, merely likewise that information technology is a circle of no cracking size. For quite a pocket-sized change of position to south or north causes a manifest amending of the horizon."

Other famed explorers who have circumnavigated the globe, such as Ferdinand Magellan and Sir Francis Drake, also failed to study observing the bounding main ice that many apartment-Earthers believe marks the ends of our earthly disc.

Still, Hughes converted to the flat-Earth belief recently, shortly after his beginning fundraising campaign for the rocket earned but $310 of its $150,000 goal. His second campaign, this time posted after his conversion and with the support of the flat-Earth customs, succeeded in hitting its $seven,875 goal.

"I've been a believer for maybe near a year. I researched it for several months in between doing everything else — y'all know, I've notwithstanding got to brand a living and all that kind of stuff, and building this rocket actually eats up a lot of my fourth dimension," he told the flat-Globe Web show. "But when I'k non doing that, I inquiry things."

And Hughes intends that research to continue well beyond Sabbatum's launch, which he says he volition be streaming online. He envisions the launch as merely ane step toward eventually getting himself into space, at which signal he plans to take a photograph "to prove once and for all this Earth is flat," he told his interviewer.

"This is the king of the deceptions," Hughes said. "In one case this domino falls, this is it."

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Source: https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2017/11/22/565926690/i-dont-believe-in-science-says-flat-earther-set-to-launch-himself-in-own-rocket

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