Posted on 07/31/2023 6:20:48 AM PDT by Jan_Sobieski
Patrick Bet-David sits down with Bart Sibrel, an American author and fil maker who has written, produced, and directed works in support of the belief that the Apollo Moon Landings between 1969 and 1972 were staged by NASA under the control of the CIA…
(Excerpt) Read more at youtu.be ...
This is like a heavy wind picking up a plane smashed into a thousand pieces, putting it together and getting it airborne again...
The crap technology was just what it seemed—crap technology.
Most of the parts, except trivial stuff like oil filters and tires, can't be had new because they haven't been made in years. Think of the factory production lines that would have be set up to make everything from wheels to pistons.
That's the vintage of equipment and engineering practice we're talking about.
That’s not true. There’s lots of stuff of value up there. Just not a high enough value to justify the cost of extraction.
Rest easy bro. We’ll figure out the stunts Jake Paul can do to make the livestream viral.
Maybe Trump could shave a billion off the budget? NASA is most likely bloated 2X.
On time and under budget style.
Well it’s crap NOW. Back then it was state of the art. That’s the fun part about technology. It keeps advancing. Nobody these days would screw around with nuclear cores using the tech the boys used to build the bombs we hit Japan with now. They’d accuse you of trying to kill them if asked them to. But at the time, that was the best we had.
Yeah, exactly. There’s really layers and layers of grossly post dated technology.
There was a guy on the net about 10 years ago, I could probably find his stuff on YouTube, that really dug into the tech that makes the that makes tech. His angle was post apocalyptic recovery. But it was really informative and helps you understand just how many layers deep we are on these things when the guy goes into all the machines necessary to make a pencil and just how much infrastructure a society would have to rebuild to get to making pencils again.
Once you start looking at that stuff you can really see how old technology gets “lost”. Once one thing in the manufacturing chain has advanced too far to make this part for the Saturn IV (or a part used by a thing to make a part for another thing to make a part for the S-IV) because it’s post dated, boom that whole chain is lost.
It wouldnt require that many people to keep it secret, if they were told that they really were going to the moon. Only the astronauts and NASA administrators would know.
It’s rockets. Of course we can do it again. Not the exact same way. But if we decided to we could do it. The biggest problem would be the lander, mostly because we just haven’t done anything that lands and comes back in a long time. So we’d have to reinvent that from scratch basically. But we could do it. Just need a reason to spend the time and money.
Yea, they faked it 6 times and nobody ever found out about it!
Sheesh...........
😂
“nobody ever found out about it”
Lots of people found out about it:
https://www.aulis.com/investigation.htm
The Deep State is a master of intimidation, ridicule, propaganda, de-platforming, canceling and even murdering if necessary—but despite all of those efforts lots of folks found out about it.
What most folks do not understand was the incredible detail of the training simulations—including minute by minute rehearsal of every aspect of the missions.
It was very easy to confuse the rehearsal with the play.
And Capricorn was a documentary that used real actors
Awright, who hid my sarcasm tags?
“...There’s lots of stuff of value...
...just not enough value to justify the cost of extraction...”
-
Here’s your sign!
Nope. Just showing I understand basic math and you don’t.
Permafrost in Siberia has posed the same kind of problem. There’s a lot of great stuff in the ground there, but dealing with permafrost is expensive. If it costs you $2 trillion to extract $1 trillion of metals that doesn’t mean there isn’t stuff of value there. Just that the extraction process is too expensive to make it worth it. There’s multiple trillions of dollars worth of stuff in the moon
https://www.hou.usra.edu/meetings/lunarsurface18/pdf/6001.pdf
But getting it... That’s hundreds of trillions of dollars. Unless we make some major technological leaps.
Forget it.
I will not waste time and bandwidth on this.
I know what I am talking about.
Absolute nonsense.
I knew local people who worked on early stages of the development.
And.
Houston, we have a problem.
Family friend retired from NASA.
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