Man who thinks the earth
is flat won't launch himself in a rocket he built in His own backyard
appears we will need to wait a while longer
to find out whether
more than two millennia of thinkers and explorers — from
Aristotle and Ferdinand Magellan, to Neil deGrasse
Tyson and John Glenn — have been wrong about the shape of the
Earth.
"Mad" Mike Hughes, limousine driver
and self-proclaimed flat-Earther, announced that he had to delay his plan to launch
himself 1,800 feet high in a rocket of his own making. The
launch, which he has billed as a crucial first step toward ultimately
photographing our disc-world from space, had been scheduled for Saturday —
before the Bureau of Land Management got wind of the plan and barred him from
using public land in Amboy, Calif.
Also, the rocket launcher he had built out of
a used motor home "broke down in the driveway" on Wednesday,
according to Hughes. He said in a YouTube announcement that they'd eventually
gotten the launcher fixed — but the small matter of federal permission proved a
more serious stumbling block (for now).
The BLM "informed me that they were not
going to allow me to do the event there — at least at that location,"
Hughes said.
Hughes asserted that the BLM last year had
tacitly left the matter of permissions to the Federal Aviation Administration,
and "of course, they can't honestly approve it," he added. The FAA
"just said, 'Well, we know that you're going to do it there.'"
"Someone from our local office reached
out to him after seeing some of these news articles [about the launch], because
that was news to them," a spokeswoman for the agency told The
Washington Post, adding that Hughes had not applied to the local BLM
field office for the necessary permit.
"So, it turned out to be not a good
thing," Hughes said.
CREATIVE COMMONS
Still, Hughes has not relented in his quest to
launch himself roughly 500 mph on a mile-long flight across the sky above the
Mojave Desert. He said he has found private property near his original launch
site, where he anticipates finally taking off as early as this coming week.
For Hughes, this launch would not be his first
in a homemade rocket. In 2014, the 61-year-old sent himself flying a
quarter-mile across the Arizona desert before pulling out several parachutes of
questionable quality on his fall to Earth. He was "in a walker for a couple
weeks" after that launch, he told a flat-Earth community Web show.
He also hopes it will not be his last such
attempt. Since converting to the flat-Earth belief after "research[ing] it
for several months in between doing everything else," Hughes has seen
a marked uptick in fundraising
contributionsto his rocket projects. And he has big plans, hoping
eventually to launch himself into space, where he believes he can overturn a
scientific understanding that predates NASA by at least
2,300 years.
.
MAYA
SUGARMAN/KPCC
"I don't believe in science," Hughes
told the AP earlier this month. "I know about aerodynamics and fluid
dynamics and how things move through the air, about the certain size of rocket
nozzles, and thrust. But that's not science, that's just a formula. There's no
difference between science and science fiction."
For now, his mission will have to wait.
"It's been very disappointing and, I
guess, enlightening — this whole week. It really has been," he said.
"But it's not easy because it's not supposed to be."
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