>>16723735Pick one, I don't care. You're not getting my point. Show me an example of someone hitting an icewall when they travelled in any direction when sailing. You can understand why someone might be tricked and think they're just in Antarctica if they went south, but if they had sailed from some other disembarking point in the world and had travelled in a straight line out into sea to what they beleive is West for example, why haven't we seen accounts or photos of people hitting icewalls?
>>16723736You're being obtuse about this on purpose. I understand that everything is south in your worldview, that's not my point. But to the rest of the world, who is tricked and thinks the earth is round, they think they are going East, and straight around the round globe and onto the other side. They don't know that every direction is south since the earth is a flat disc or whatever. So with that in mind, why hasn't there been an example, along with photographic evidence, of someone leaving, say California for example, by boat and then sailing straight West and instead of coming around to the other side of North America, hitting a giant ice barrier in the middle of the ocean. If you thought the world was round, one would think that would be a pretty jarring and significant experience.
>>16723738>he circumnavigated the planet at a high southern latitudeAgain, stop trying to go South, I'm not talking about fucking South. Everyone knows, or if they're globeheads as you say, THINKS Antarctica is in the south so it's not crazy to run into ice continent there. Where is an example of someone hitting a giant ice wall when sailing out into the sea in any other direction besides Antarctica?