Its funny how people attribute all sorts of special properties to something they have no experience with. We've had HBs that thought air filled tires would explode in a vacuum. Including one that thought that "fact" proved the lunar rover was fake? As a 4 or 5 year old kid paying attention to the Gemini program, I thought it was the vacuum of space that made the astronauts weightless. The vacuum seems to be a magical state for some people.
Here is another one for you.
I talked to someone a few weeks back who is not really a hoax believer, they are just someone who I put in the category
"the Americans didn't really go to the moon, did they?". Most of you will know the type, they have just seen the odd thing mentioned on the internet, and probably don't much care one way or the other.
Well, this particular person seemed to think that weightlessness in orbit is caused by weaker gravity because they are further away from the earth. I tried to explain about how an object in orbit is
"always falling" towards the earth, but its forward speed is such that the point where it is falling to is always beyond the horizon due to the curvature of the earth. (I would like to find a better way to explain this sometime)
I asked her to imagine that we had a spacecraft with an unlimited fuel supply that was able to stay 500 miles up over the same spot on the earth (using its rockets to keep it there). Would the occupants feel weightlessness? She said yes because the astronauts in the ISS were only a couple of hundred miles up and they feel weightless.
When I said,
"how about the people on the top floor of a 500 mile high tower building", I saw the penny drop!