It ’s all befall .

1.On The Sun:

2.On the globe:

3.On oxygen:

4.On flying planes:

5.On ancient hunting:

6.On the Titanic:

7.On the miracle of birth:

8.On illusions:

9.On the ark:

10.On the MOON:

11.On oil:

12.On viruses:

13.On being good:

14.On hurricanes:

15.On the Earth:

16.On RICE:

17.On God’s plan:

18.On time:

19.On those pesky little sacks:

20.On icebergs:

21.On being careless:

22.On artificial intelligence:

23.On rabies:

24.On math:

25.On the building blocks of life:

26.On modern medicine:

27.On pickles:

28.On amounts:

29.And on gravity:

A person in a green suit and hat with a question mark overlay, alongside text questioning why the sun lights Earth but not outer space

A globe with a sticker stating it's for decorative purposes, not educational, is shown alongside a caption questioning the globe's purpose

Screenshot of a social media post showing a contrail in a blue sky with text expressing disbelief

Meme suggesting flat Earth theory: A plane supposedly needs to descend to maintain level flight over a spherical Earth

"History books really convinced us that early humans used to hunt woolly mammoths with spears; that animal weighed 5 tons, with a speed of 24 mph; imagine trying to stop a Uhual truck with a spear — that's how I know most of ancient history is BS"

Tweet questioning if Titanic was real, referencing a post that marks the 113th anniversary of the Titanic sinking. Black-and-white image of the Titanic

Text exchange with misspelled words; humorous reaction to "certificate" misspelled as "sitifitert."

Social media post comments discuss an "obstacle illusion," with one correcting it to "optical," sparking humorous reactions

A Twitter exchange about the feasibility of fitting water species on a boat, with one user suggesting more research

Social media post questioning if the moon is a rock, expressing disbelief that rocks are tangible while the moon is not

Image with text stating: "If you think this pipeline is connected to a dinosaur pit you have been fooled twice. Dinosaurs never existed & oil is renewable."

Social media reply stating disbelief in viruses, claiming it's impossible to harm others this way, and referencing religious belief

Text exchange about the term "goodie tissues," explaining it's similar to "goody two shoes."

Tweet questioning if it's odd that 8 major hurricanes in 7 years only hit Red States, displaying a map showing hurricane paths

Facebook post about discovering plastic rice; switched to quinoa, positive outcome, encourages never giving up and educating others about food choices

Text in image: "If we need vaccines why did God need us to make them?" Reply: "Have you ever taken any medicine ever? Yes? Fantastic. Now ask the same exact nonsensical question about them."

Twitter exchange about Blue Collar Burger's operating hours. User questions its one-hour operation

Text post with a humorous complaint about driving in cul-de-sacs and difficulty finding addresses

Social media post with snowflake border humorously claims that melting icebergs will lower ocean levels, calling it "2nd grade science."

The image shows social media comments. One user says "Wish people would be more careful with their pets and not so slack a daisy," another replies, "lackadaisical?"

Social media exchange about AI miscalculating someone's age, with users humorously discussing turning 36 twice

Text claims rabies is a hoax and criticizes Louis Pasteur, labeling it "system poisoning" with no virus

Text questioning if 0.999… equals 1, claiming it is nearly zero because it never reaches 1

Tweet asks if mRNA is in everything and can be avoided. Reply states mRNA is in every living cell and questions the original poster's education

Text image showing a post saying: "Does anyone know where I can get oils for like shingles?" and a comment suggesting science as a cure

Screenshot of a social media comment section discussing whether cucumbers are used to make pickles, featuring humorous and confused replies

Label on a milk container reads, "50% larger than a half gallon," with an amused social media caption highlighting the statement's redundancy

Summary of text: Image contains a humorous explanation suggesting gravity is false, claiming "GRAVITY IS A HOAX, THE EARTH IS NOT SPINNING AND IT'S NOT A BALL."