Moon Landing Conspiracy
-
jmbwithcats — 14 years ago(August 23, 2011 01:20 PM)
Bump, come on, someone has to have some knowledge here.
www.imdb.com/mymovies/list?l=6751188
www.kittysafe.net -
Sitcom_Sally — 14 years ago(August 25, 2011 01:30 PM)
An interview I recently watched led me to believe that they used photos from training sessions to release to the public, but that fact did not mean they did not land on the moon. The fake photos are really obvious. The person being interviewed had a British accent, and I think his name was Green, but I could be really wrong on that. He did not believe that they landed on the moon. If I find it I'll post it, but I did not save it and just happened upon it while looking at other videos. I'm not sure how I came upon it. Do you know who I'm talking about? He's probably in his early 60s, thin, stylishly dressed.
The perfect human being is uninteresting. - Joseph Campbell -
jmbwithcats — 14 years ago(August 25, 2011 01:43 PM)
I heard about that as well, and believe it was debunked as simply being a narrator for an introduction to an interview session or something.
Basically, every conspiracy surrounding the moon landing has been thoroughly debunked.
Dutch Rock
One thing that makes me pretty sure this is not going to give hoax believers a field day, is that it only took a quick geologist's look to determine that this was fake. If other moon rocks were fake, geologists would have known after only some quick inspection.
On top of that we have to remember that this fake moon rock was given to a Dutch ex-premier as a gift 40 years ago, and has never been in scientific circles before.
So the Dutch just assumed it was a moon rock because they got it with a rather ambiguous plaque:
A jagged fist-size stone with reddish tints, it was mounted and placed above a plaque that said, "With the compliments of the Ambassador of the United States of America to commemorate the visit to The Netherlands of the Apollo-11 astronauts."
The plaque does not specify that the rock came from the moon's surface.
It was Drees (the ex-Prime Minister who originally got the rock) who assumed it was a moon rock. When someone from the Rijksmuseum phoned with NASA to check whether it really was, NASA said it was possible. But still, the museum curators were still pretty careless with the whole deal.- It is misleading to say "fakes" as that implies deceoption on purpose. The event in question is simply a silly mistake.
- It is incorrect to imply that the people who study these things can't tell the difference between rocks gathered from the Moon and meteorites (some of which we know do come from the Moon).
- As noted in the story, this rock wasn't studied. when it was, the error was picked up. No big deal; and again, no reason to cry "fake".
Wires used
Mythbusters actually debunked that one.
Not enough oxygen
They carried enough O2 for two weeks. The CO2 that astronauts exhaled was filter by lithium hydroxide.
There were six moon landings in total. The first involved only a single "extravehicular activity" (moon walk). The next two each had two EVAs. The last each had three moonwalks and one so-called "stand up" EVA, which entailed one astronaut standing halfway out of the top hatch of the lunar module. Each mission had at most four evacuations of the oxygen from the lunar module, and not "nineteen times a day". The breathing gas was pure oxygen at a pressure of about 4.5 PSI, which is a pressure much lower than atmospheric pressure at the surface of the earth. Furthermore, the oxygen in the lunar module was kept cryogenically (very cold, and in a liquid state), so was much denser than how breathing oxygen is normally kept for, say, medical applications or diving on earth. Also, the lunar module had a re-breathing apparatus aboard, which removed the carbon dioxide from exhaled breath out of the breathing supply and gave out pure oxygen again. This way, when the oxygen was not being purged for an EVA, oxygen was being consumed at a rate of only a few grams per hour per astronaut. This system is very efficient for supplying plenty of oxygen on a prolonged lunar stay.
http://www.imdb.com/user/ur2533227/ratings
www.kittysafe.net
-
jmbwithcats — 13 years ago(March 03, 2013 10:27 AM)
Always beware no matter what is said
But in this case, the debunking is fairly exhaustive.
Web
www.jmberman.com
Fcbk
https://www.facebook.com/catnipdream -
shaneyfex — 14 years ago(March 20, 2012 08:58 AM)
alabel-1 makes a good point: we were in a cold war with the USSR and they would of blabbed like a middleschool kid in the lunch room. The photos of the tracks and trash left behind on the moon is some good proof. Obvious human footprints and trash left by astronauts, that's a long way to go to 'plant' evidence that humans/Americans were on the moon. LOL.
-
heyuactor — 14 years ago(March 22, 2012 11:26 AM)
The Soviets would have blabbed.
First, I wouldn't rely on anything the Soviet govt did or didn't say, as reliable proof. Second, a poster last year on the Politics board had many links on this subject, and I felt there was a valid argument the Soviets didn't have telescopes that were able to watch and confirm the landings, until after they ceased. And some photos from the 'moon' do appear to have artificial lighting, and some photos do show what look like, to
me
, wires going way up above the astronauts.
What's the truth? Faked from a set somewhere, and fed to the mission control center and to the news outlets, to help us win the Cold War?
I wouldn't be surprised but we need still more evidence and such to convince me 100%.
"Did you make coffee? Make it!"Cheyenne. -
alabel-1 — 13 years ago(October 09, 2012 12:00 AM)
I felt there was a valid argument the Soviets didn't have telescopes that were able to watch and confirm the landings, until after they ceased.
Optical telescopes don't apply here. The Soviets had their own deep space tracking network that could pick up the radio signals of American space flights. -
shaneyfex — 12 years ago(April 26, 2013 09:23 AM)
My father worked on the Apollo missions communication system and we did go to the moon, landed there and took off many friggin many times. Recently the best evidence is the trash and footprints on the moons surface by a moon mapping system. It's all BS (not going to the moon) and people that have no lives and do nothing but be idiots spend there time on posting this BS maybe not a real TROLL but stupid to say the least.
-
jmbwithcats — 12 years ago(April 26, 2013 09:26 AM)
I was bringing this up for discussion, I know we clearly went to the moon, you sorta missed my point.
Web
www.jmberman.com
Fcbk
https://www.facebook.com/catnipdream -
jmbwithcats — 12 years ago(April 27, 2013 01:03 AM)
I said that.
Web
www.jmberman.com
Fcbk
https://www.facebook.com/catnipdream -
shaneyfex — 12 years ago(May 03, 2013 02:47 PM)
http://www.space.com/12835-nasa-apollo-moon-landing-sites-photos-lro.html
they must of hired aliens to make these marks on the moon, I wonder if they liked strawberry icecream like the sole survivor of roswell.
