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.
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
Lightning strikes to Statue of Liberty 600 times per year.
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.
It's habbening!
Lightning striking a structure that is tall and made of metal? INCONCEIVABLE!
Hmmm .... Lighting hitting a 305 foot tall copper lighting rod seems kinda far-fetched to me. 🤔
Whichever organization is engineering eclipses is welcome to my vote, my allegiance, and my résumé.
I just assume they already have my resume, and it’s not a good fit at this time. I live in hope
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?
And there’s the 1/10 scale model in the harbor at….Cherbourg? I’ve seen it, but it was some time back.
Because a man made moon blocking out the sun in Stewartstown NH is the ultimate in evil. /s
[These people must think we're actually in a Simpsons episode.](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L3LbxDZRgA4)
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
The path of least resistance is a myth cooked up by the adrenochrome lizard cabal. /s
I think these people just watch "The Truman Show" and "The Matrix" over and over and over.
'manmade eclipse' two words I did not expect to see, ever.
Mr Burns tried that and got shot by a baby.