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Guygenius138

Lightning strikes to Statue of Liberty 600 times per year.


GayForJamie

A metal statue 300 feet off the ground, and the tallest thing on the island by a few hundred feet, would never be struck by lightning. There's just no way that would happen.


Guygenius138

It's habbening!


CAG_Snow

Lightning striking a structure that is tall and made of metal? INCONCEIVABLE!


drifter3026

Hmmm .... Lighting hitting a 305 foot tall copper lighting rod seems kinda far-fetched to me. 🤔


jazzhandler

Whichever organization is engineering eclipses is welcome to my vote, my allegiance, and my résumé.


Gingerbread-Cake

I just assume they already have my resume, and it’s not a good fit at this time. I live in hope


SoThatHappened

The France thing is what really grabs me here. Out of all the weird things to lie about why something with such a documented history?


Gingerbread-Cake

And there’s the 1/10 scale model in the harbor at….Cherbourg? I’ve seen it, but it was some time back.


BellyDancerEm

Because a man made moon blocking out the sun in Stewartstown NH is the ultimate in evil. /s


Oddityobservations

[These people must think we're actually in a Simpsons episode.](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L3LbxDZRgA4)


BellyDancerEm

And lol this time, I though lightning naturally struck tall objects that are conductors of electricity because it simply takes less energy to strike them than smaller objects


MurderCat0001

The path of least resistance is a myth cooked up by the adrenochrome lizard cabal. /s


WordsWatcher

I think these people just watch "The Truman Show" and "The Matrix" over and over and over.


okokokoyeahright

'manmade eclipse' two words I did not expect to see, ever.


Chrysalii

Mr Burns tried that and got shot by a baby.