When one views stars such as Sirius or Procyon through a telescope, one very quickly realíses that these stars cannot be trillions of miles away.
The NASA cosmology requires that stars be located very far from Earth, so as not to be subject to parallax. If the stars were close, then the distance traveled by the Earth during her orbit of the sun, and the distance traveled by the sun through the galaxy, would affect the relative positions of the stars when viewed from Earth.
The trouble for the NASA cosmology is that the stars are very obviously only ten or twenty thousand kilometres away and are very clearly created by some kind of electromagnetic phenomena
Take a look here:
Congratulations @wishinshow! You have completed some achievement on Steemit and have been rewarded with new badge(s) :
You published your First Post
Click on any badge to view your own Board of Honor on SteemitBoard.
For more information about SteemitBoard, click here
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word
STOP
It's so obvious that those effects are from the camera you're looking at it with that it's actually kind of embarrassing. Like, have you ever looked at the sky with a real telescope, to be talking about what one sees with a telescope?