Get some cheap cameras, some lights with stands, 50 rolls of tin foil and a couple lapel mics and head out to the Badlands of South Dakota with some amateur actors and YOU TOO can film the next “moon” landing. It will be one small step for the elementary science fair, and one even smaller step for mankind.
Take one look at the “Apollo 11” spacecraft, made with sticks, tin foil, cardboard, a couple copper pipes and some old television antennas, and then swear up and down this thing made it 240,000 miles to the moon and back home to earth with 3 guys in it, a land rover, and enough equipment to fill up a storage facility, and you can be 100% sure the moon landing was all faked on a Hollywood set somewhere in Arizona. Great job NASA. Does NASA stand for Never Anything So Absurd?
- Rising Skepticism About the Moon Landing
- Polls indicate growing doubt, especially among younger, more educated individuals (e.g., 73% of Brits aged 25–34 disbelieve it, vs. 38% of those 55+).
- Russian polls show 57% disbelief, rising to 69% among higher-educated respondents.
- Alleged Evidence of Fakery
- Shadows intersecting at 90° in Apollo photos suggest studio lighting, not sunlight.
- “Moon rocks” may originate from Antarctic meteorites; some samples were proven fake (e.g., petrified wood gifted to the Netherlands).
- NASA’s high-resolution photos show anomalies (e.g., inconsistent shadows, overexposure when shooting into the sun).
- Suspicious Filmmaking and Footage
- Filmmakers like Bart Sibrel uncovered edited NASA footage (e.g., repeated takes to fake distance).
- Experts like Hasselblad engineer Jan Lundberg admitted they couldn’t explain photo inconsistencies.
- Astronauts’ rehearsals in studios with fabricated “moon dust” raise questions about authenticity.
- Historical Context of the Hoax Theory
- Conspiracy claims gained traction post-internet; pioneers like Bill Kaysing (ex-Rocketdyne) alleged a $30B fraud.
- Documentaries (What Happened on the Moon?, A Funny Thing Happened…) dissect technical flaws.
- Compartmentalization (e.g., Manhattan Project secrecy) suggests few needed to know the full truth.