Question:

About USA's visit to the moon?

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Did we actually go? Is it true that the radiation from the atmosphere would have penetrated the hull and killed anyone?

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  1. According to an ET source - via Billy Meier, ie. the Plejarens - they say that Apollo 11 was hoaxed, but later moon missions were genuine.

    You can read about it here..

    http://www.futureofmankind.co.uk/Billy_M...

    (also www.figu.org [English Discussion Board])

    I have researched this material for the past 5 years, and find it worthy to spend your time on.  There is a DVD out titled "The Silent Revolution of Truth" which shows the evidence for this case, on the DVD.  This info is at various sites, etc ... but it is handy all on the one DVD.


  2. i still remain skeptical... but i know we've went atleast once.... there are mirrors on the moon that are placed in a precise spot at a precise angle (used to calculate how fast the moon is moving away from us).... they couldn't have just thrown it to the moon and no rover of those ages woudl really be capable of puttitng it there with such precision (if they could even get one back then to do it)

    so we've went atleast once...

    btw, originally the moon was seen as a military asset (although few really know all this... it's one of those things that have the book closed on it and it's been locked away deep in the bowels of a library) whoever could get to the moon could station troops, refineries for minerals/materials [including materials needed for warfare] missile silo's that could rain down h**l on the enemy and the enemy would be powerless to stop it (think how hard it would be for us to even today, send a missile from the earth to the moon and hit something the size of a missile silo.....) they wouldn't even need much fuel (just for course corrections and last minute allignments) to power these missiles.... it would be the ultimate advantage...

    this idea was pretty much dismissed after the first few probes were sent.... it was completely abandoned when we actually sent someone to the moon.... it took us actually going there for several diffrent govts. to realize just how impractical it actually was...

  3. The United States first landed man on the moon in 1969.

    the moon has no 'atmosphere' to protect a human from solar radiation,coronal mass ejection etc. so space crafts and EVA suits

    are designed to protect humans from such radiation

  4. Neal Armstrong was the first person to set foot on the moon in 1969.  We were competing with the Soviet Union to awe third world countries into doing business with us.  The Soviets kept a step ahead of us for awhile, but they did not have the resources to go all the way.  Once we established that we were number one with no challengers, we deemed the expense no longer necessary.  So after about a half dozen moon missions the program was terminated.  The last mission, I believe, occurred in 1972.

  5. We did really go...a couple times.  Radiation is a problem in space and does penetrate the ship.  It's minimal however, and for the amount of time astronauts are in space, it doesn't cause too much damage.

  6. you are so completely wrong on so many points it's hard to know where to start.

    it happened, and it happened nine times (6 landings + 3 other missions). deal with it.

    the apollo missions were extensively documented, independently observed, and half a million ppl worked their butts off to make them happen. why do punks like you find it necessary to insult the greatest achievement of the 20th century?

  7. radiation is scary, but it really isn't that mysterious.

    the whole reason you wear a tinfoil hat is to protect your brain from the radiation probes from aliens, right?

    well, that either works or it doesn't.

    if it doesn't, then why are you bothering?

  8. Yes we went, the people at NASA were smart enough to account (quite easily) for the radiation.  The sun emits mainly alpha and beta radiation (not gamma which would have killed them) which is easily blocked by thin sheets of metal or specially insulated fabric and glass (for the suits).

  9. Yes, we went.  The evidence is dramatically in favor of it, conspiracy theories notwithstanding.

    As for radiation, it's not in the atmosphere.  The first radiation obstacle for manned space flight is the Van Allen belts.  No, it won't penetrate the hull.  Dr. Van Allen himself repudiated those wacky theories.  And you won't find a single other qualified astrophysicist who doubts the authenticity of the Apollo missions based on the radiation argument.

    The people who are claiming radiation would have posed an impassable obstacle have no training, experience, or understanding of radiation:  they're librarians and construction workers, not physicists.

  10. yes we did qutie a while ago

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