Htaxu3 wrote:
There was an awesome video on youtube a year or so ago of a guy who's father had been at the soundstage of where they filmed the moon landing in the Desert of the American West, who just died of cancer. I've been trying to find it but it seemes that YT just deleted it. Sadly YTs been quicker and quicker about deleting great content like this. His testimony seemed pretty legit, or if you don't believe it it was quite interesting at least !
Hmmm... like I said for me I've hated central secular rule for as long as I can remember, and Political Correctness and all they do and all this from above. I would say though stuff like the Moon Landing I never seriously started to question until I saw just what a joke everything to do with Covid and the Vaccine was and just how fully and completely this was orchestrated. All this and how this was run took it to the next level, in my opinion, with what I think these bastards have been capable of, all these years. Now in my opinion, Western Science is hardly worth the paper it is printed on.
I would hardly know to begin at this point, on what topics to start ripping apart the Lamestream and their credibility and all this. Like for me, all these woke idiots running all these bureaucracies now, it looks about as valid as like it would be in the Middle Ages a bunch of churchmen standing around a body and discussing how they're going to do some surgery like trepanning.
It wasn't done on a soundstage. The necessary lights to create the images we have didn't even exist at the time. The shadows themselves couldn't have been made with lights that were available at the time. Getting those sorts of inky black darks to bright lights with no transition and all of the lights being more or less completely parallel was just not possible with technology available at the time.
The whole thing has been thoroughly debunked numerous times.
https://skyandtelescope.org/observing/h ... ing-sites/ for how to view the sites with a telescope.
The photos in the article are taken by the NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter; and yet you see them only as small dots (ie. the lunar and other artifacts left behind) and lines (tracks); I highly doubt you can see anything comprehensible with any home telescope, the problem is not only the distance but also the required resolution; those objects are super tiny compared to the moon’s size.