

(People who voted in 2016 for Green Party candidate Jill Stein, though, were more likely to say they believe in a flat Earth.)Īn online pollster earlier this year made waves when it announced that only two-thirds of young millennials believe the Earth is round. Statistically, there was no difference between women and men, Republicans and Democrats, Trump voters and Hillary Clinton voters. Last year, a poll from Public Policy Polling found a mere 1 percent of people in America believe the Earth is flat. “It’s getting bigger and growing larger every day.” “It’s not going away,” says Robbie Davidson, the conference’s organizer. Millions of people have viewed flat-Earth videos on YouTube.

This is the largest crowd yet for the conference - 650 people from across the world are registered, almost 50 percent more than last year’s conference. (John Leyba, Special to The Colorado Sun)įrom the conference’s main stage, the speakers talk in superlatives. Robbie Davidson, the organizer of the 2018 Flat Earth International Conference, walks through the exhibit hall in the Crowne Plaza Denver Airport Convention Center. We went to a flat-Earth convention and found a lesson about the future of post-truth life - The Colorado Sun Close
