Originally posted by: KK
I believe that whole landing on the moon thing was made up too. It was staged in some warehouse outside of Boulder, Co. You can never trust the media for squat.
KK
Man that one was faker than any Godzilla movie.
Originally posted by: KK
I believe that whole landing on the moon thing was made up too. It was staged in some warehouse outside of Boulder, Co. You can never trust the media for squat.
KK
Originally posted by: Phokus
Originally posted by: KK
I believe that whole landing on the moon thing was made up too. It was staged in some warehouse outside of Boulder, Co. You can never trust the media for squat.
KK
I know you're joking, but there is actual evidence that the landing might have been faked. (no stars in the back ground, flag waving when there's no wind, etc.)
Originally posted by: Phokus
Originally posted by: KK
I believe that whole landing on the moon thing was made up too. It was staged in some warehouse outside of Boulder, Co. You can never trust the media for squat.
KK
I know you're joking, but there is actual evidence that the landing might have been faked. (no stars in the back ground, flag waving when there's no wind, etc.)
Pictures of astronauts sent from the Moon don't include stars in the dark lunar sky. How could that be? Did NASA's film makers forget to turn on the stars? Most people who take photos know the answer: it's hard to take a picture of something very bright and something else very dim on the same photo. Ever watch a TV program or movie with outdoor night scenes? Unless the movie producers fake stars in the sky, or use special cameras, you just don't see stars. The cameras are adjusted for the actors, and the stars in the background are too dim to see.
Everyone has seen the video of astronauts planting a US flag on the Moon. You can see the flag flexing and rippling. How can that be? There's no breeze on the Moon. But then, there's no atmosphere, either. When the astronauts planted the flagpole they twisted it back and forth to sink it into the lunar soil. On the Earth, that would have made the flag "wave" for a few seconds, then stop. But that's because the flag pushes against air as it flaps, and the air slows it down. On the Moon, there was no air to stop the flag's motion, so it continued, just as Newton's First Law of physics says it should. So of course the cloth flag waved and rippled beneath the metal rod holding it out.
