>>3982932Well the thing about the Electric Universe Theory is that it isn't difficult to see what they're talking about, and the more you look into it the more it makes sense.
Example: The caldera of Olympus Mons, the largest "volcano" we can observe in our solar system. We call it a volcano because it's a large mountain with a caldera on tops, there's a blast effect around it, which would lead us to believe it's was from an eruption. They claim the caldera is remarkably smooth for an area where lava was supposed to be pouring from, and they point out the fact that there are craters centered on other craters, and you can even see where some of these craters began being cut into other craters. Craters centered on the rim of other craters can be see on Mars and the moon, and they claim this occurs because electricity follows the path of least resistance, and that the Olympus Mons was probably the site of a large lightning strikes which raised the mountain, and that at some point the arc jumped from the lowest point (the center) to the highest point (the rim). The "blast" effect seen around the site can be seen in a lab when electricity is discharged onto clay, water rises out of it and begins "sweating" away from the discharge site.
I have a topographic map of Mars here
>>3981640. Olympus Mons is the large mountain all the way to the West. The scar you see just to the East is the Valles Marineris. Notice how the mountain range to the west and the valley on the east spiral around toward the center, creating a figure 8. This is another feature they go into in great detail, explaining their electric discharge characteristics.