"I believe a magic being flies through the air and created everything and any evidence that proves that wrong has to be wrong, obviously"
"I have proof that the sun is 93 million miles from Earth, the speed of light is 186,000 miles per second, the universe is 13.72 billion years old, the Earth is round, and men evolved from apes when one of our chromosomes fused and we went from having 48 chromosomes which apes have, to having 46 chromosomes which humans have."
"Well I don't believe any of that but let's debate it ok?"
"These things are proven already, the rigorous debate took place during the last 100 years between PH.D's in each field of study."
"Oh they don't know anything, I do because I say I do. And in America my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge."
"No, you are free to be ignorant, but you aren't free to force that ignorance to be taught to children. The Flat Earth Society is meeting this week near you, why don't you go and 'debate them' about their beliefs. Certainly you would say their beliefs are just as valid as yours yes? Good, have fun!"
Is the sun really 93 million miles from Earth TODAY versus 4 billion years ago?
Based on your above I assume you say it is because it is proven science.
But have you considered this?
There is another effect which is also small, but somewhat bigger than the tidal effect. The Sun is powered by nuclear fusion, which means the Sun is continuously transforming a small part of its mass into energy. As the mass of the Sun goes down, our orbit gets proportionally bigger. However, over the entire main sequence lifetime of the Sun (about 10 billion years), the Sun will only lose about 0.1% of its mass, which means that the Earth should move out by just ~150,000 km (small compared to the total Earth-Sun distance of ~150,000,000 km). If we assume that the Sun's rate of nuclear fusion today is the same as the average rate over those 10 billion years (a bold assumption, but it should give us a rough idea of the answer), then we're moving away from the Sun at the rate of ~1.5 cm (less than an inch) per year. I probably don't even need to mention that this is so small that we don't have to worry about freezing.
Is the distance from the Earth to the Sun changing? (Advanced) - Curious About Astronomy? Ask an Astronomer
So assuming the Earth is 4 billion years old and the Sun is loosing it's mass due to fusion, then 4 billion inches equals 63,131 miles farther away then
92,955,807 miles it is today. That means the Sun was 92,892,676 miles 4 billion years ago then it is today.
The distance from Earth to the sun is called an astronomical unit, or AU, which is used to measure distances throughout the solar system. The AU has been defined as 149,597,870,700 meters (
92,955,807 miles). Astronomers use the AU for measuring distances throughout the solar system.Sep 17, 2012
How Far is Earth from the Sun?
So how sure are you about your "constants" in your above comments???