The Bermuda Triangle: Portal Near the Edge? Flat Earth Researchers Reignite Debate

The Bermuda Triangle: Portal Near the Edge? Flat Earth Researchers Reignite Debate

MYSTERY OR MISDIRECTION?

ATLANTIC OCEAN — Long considered one of the most mysterious regions on Earth, the Bermuda Triangle has puzzled scientists, sailors, and conspiracy theorists for decades. But now, Flat Earth researchers are offering a bold new interpretation: what if the disappearances aren’t anomalies… but design?

They’re not calling it a danger zone anymore — they’re calling it a checkpoint.


DISAPPEARANCES THAT DEFY EXPLANATION

The Bermuda Triangle — marked by the points of Miami, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico — has been blamed for hundreds of strange disappearances over the past century. Planes vanish from radar. Ships go silent without distress calls. Compasses spin. Communication dies. And all without leaving a trace.

But mainstream science has never reached a consensus. They offer vague explanations like "magnetic anomalies" and "unexpected storms" — yet none fully explain the sheer number of incidents.


A FLAT EARTH INTERPRETATION

Flat Earth theorists, however, have a different idea. They suggest that the Bermuda Triangle lies near one of several access points to the outer realms — regions beyond the commonly accepted world map. On the flat Earth model, the known continents lie inside a giant circular plane, surrounded by an Antarctic ice wall and perhaps other lands beyond.

“The Triangle might be more than a mystery,” says Darrin Holloway, a leading voice in the flat Earth research community.
“It may be a controlled gate near the edge — where surveillance, distortion, and redirection keep us inside the known world.”


SATELLITES, SIGNALS, AND SILENCE

Interestingly, Flat Earth proponents also tie the Triangle’s behavior to their satellite skepticism. In their view, GPS signals aren’t beamed from space, but relayed through high-altitude balloons and towers.

“That’s why GPS fails in the Triangle,” Holloway explains.
“It’s not natural interference — it’s a blackout zone by design.”

Supporting this claim, historical accounts describe planes veering off course, altimeters failing, and entire fleets — like Flight 19 in 1945 — disappearing without mechanical explanation.


A GATE TO THE UNKNOWN?

More fringe theorists claim that the Triangle may even be a tear in the firmament — the alleged solid dome above the Earth mentioned in ancient texts. If true, they argue, this area could serve as an escape hatch for surveillance equipment or even a launch path for hidden operations.

Others speculate it's a dimensional rift, a place where those who vanish may cross into regions we're not meant to access — unmapped lands beyond the Antarctic wall.


CONCLUSION: STILL A MYSTERY, OR SOMETHING MORE?

While the mainstream continues to dismiss these claims as pseudoscience, the surge in alternative Earth theories — fueled by unanswered questions, suspicious disappearances, and conflicting satellite data — keeps the Bermuda Triangle in the center of speculation.

“If Earth isn’t a spinning globe, then the Bermuda Triangle isn’t random,” Holloway says.
“It’s strategic. It’s protected. And it’s part of the lie.”