I know some of my friends think I'm crazy for discussing this topic. And, that's okay! We remain friends. :)
Two years ago I was exposed to the flat Earth perspective, and it quickly drew me to it as it is science, not "scientism" -- in other words, we can do our own experiments, rather than relying on lying NASA to provide their fake "results." Like the Pluto image with the Disney dog named "Pluto" visible in it; or the gravity waves detected, which was then walked back saying "we corrupted the data as a test" and thus something was seen. Or poor astronaut Gus Grissom, who tried to tell the truth and was murdered by NASA for it.
I had learned about several older songs which demonstrate either a knowledge of flatness, or at least questioning the consensus reality. Recently, I've found another!
Beatles wrote two of them: "Fool on the Hill", and "Yellow Submarine".
In the former, the fool on the hill is keeping perfectly still -- i.e., he's not rotating, revolving, or spinning madly based on numerous force vectors. He sees the sun going down, but "the eyes in his head see the world spinning round" -- in other words, the fool sees the "sun setting" but has been fooled by the globalists into believing that the world is turning, and that's what causes the sunset, rather than perspective which makes things disappear into the horizon at a distance. Yes, this includes shining lights, like the sun.
And, three times it repeats this at the beginning of the last two verses, and the ending: "Oh, round, round, round, round, round", as in, those are the thoughts he's thinking.
In "Yellow Submarine", "we lived beneath the waves in our Yellow Submarine" -- in Genesis, it is described that God separates the waters above and below, to create the Earth. So, there are waves above and below this realm. It's like we're in a bathysphere, which when motorized is a submarine.
The lyric "And our friends are all on board; many more of them live next door" might be referring to the possibility that more than just this realm was created, and they might be separated by long distances of ice-wasteland, i.e. Antarctica. This is Matt Boyland's theme (he's renamed himself Math Powerland; I no longer follow him).
Jonathan Coulton's new (to me) song (from 2011) "Dissolve" features the lyrics, "Now everything is standing still, It was only my head that made it revolve" -- I've been listening to this for a couple months now, and it wasn't until yesterday that I realized this was very much like the "Fool on the Hill" lyrics!
The rest of the song is more about a breakup than the shape of what we're standing on.
I really, really enjoy this new (to me) album! I know he has a newer one, "Solid State", which I will start listening to soon; not done with this one yet. :)
