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June 24th, 2019 | #1 |
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An Audience with Neil Armstrong (2011 interview)
Given not long before he died. Thought I would post it in honor of Apollo 11's 50th anniversary.
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"Military men are dumb, stupid animals to be used as pawns for foreign policy." --Henry A. Kissinger, jewish politician and advisor |
June 24th, 2019 | #2 |
fluxmaster
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It's interesting that he died on the same day that Voyager I left the solar system and entered interstellar space.
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All these ideas…are chained to the existence of men, to who[m]…they owe their existence. Precisely in this case the preservation of these definite races and men is the precondition for the existence of these ideas. --Adolf Hitler |
July 4th, 2019 | #3 |
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1. ZOG never lies to us.
2. ZOG always lies to us. Which is more nearly true? ZOG (NASA) tells us that on the moon, stars cannot be seen. In reality, on the moon (with no atmosphere), the stars would be blazingly visible. ZOG (NASA) showed us that on the moon, in a vacuum, when you drive a golf ball, you may slice it. In reality, no air means no curving. ZOG (NASA) tells us that the radiation in the Van Allen belts and on the moon didn't harm the astronauts. Do you believe that? The crew of a space shuttle that was 650 miles below the lowest Van Allen belt said that the radiaton was so strong that they could see sparks of light with their eyes closed. CNN reported: "The radiation belt surrounding the earth is more dangerous than previously believed." Why didn't the 6 Apollo missions reveal this radiation danger? ZOG (NASA) tells us that the radiation on the moon didn't have the slightest effect on the film in the cameras (which had no lead shielding). ZOG (NASA) tells us that the exhaust from the rocket engines of the lunar landers never dug even a shallow crater---didn't even kick up any dust. ZOG (NASA) tells us that astronauts wearing pressurized gloves could manipulate the controls of their cameras. We have video footage of the Apollo 11 astronauts, in low Earth orbit, filming (in the darkened interior of the craft) a portion of the Earth's surface through one of the round windows, in order to pretend that the disk seen through the window was the complete globe as seen from a location halfway to the moon. Armstrong was almost killed in the only test flight in a lunar-lander-type craft. And yet none of the Apollo missions had trouble landing on the moon. Armstrong refused to swear that he had walked on the moon. Astronaut James Irwin called Bill Kaysing (Apollo debunker) to say that he wanted to talk to him about Apollo. Three days later Irwin died of a heart attack. And so forth. Think of the useful, pacifying effect that the moon-landing spectacle had on Whites in America. They were dismayed and appalled by school-busing, integration, "civil rights" for negroes, "affirmative action", negro crime and rioting, race-mixing, etc. NASA's extravaganza made Whites say, "Yes, our society is being ruined, but at least we are on our way to the stars! There is hope for the future. We put a man on the moon! We're so proud to be Americans!" https://archive.org/details/DidWeLandOnTheMoon https://archive.org/details/BartSibrelMoonMyths http://archive.org/details/BillKaysingRawInterview http://archive.org/details/RalphReneRawInterview https://archive.org/details/DidWeReallyLandMenOnTheMoon http://archive.org/details/WasItOnly...sM.Collier1997 |
July 4th, 2019 | #4 |
fluxmaster
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NASA at the time was dominated by Werner von Braun and his team of Nazi rocket scientists:
All of the objections you raise have been answered many times, and the answers are quite simple. I'll touch on a few of them: Stars are generally only visible at night, not in the daytime, when the missions took place. Nevertheless, even at night, stars are extremely difficult to photograph. Take any camera and shoot an outdoor photo without a tripod on a star-filled night. I guarantee you will not see any stars in the photo. Stars appear dim to us, not blazingly bright. The only way to photograph stars is with a tripod and a time exposure. The Van Allen radiation belts are shaped like a donut, with openings at the North and South pole. The astronauts passed through the openings very quickly. Nonetheless, they did suffer radiation damage. The descent engine did kick up dust, as can plainly be seen in the descent videos. The cameras had extra-large controls so they could be operated with gloves on. There were many test flights of the LLTV, only one of which crashed. That is the point of practicing, to get better. There is wind on earth, which made flying the LLTV more difficult than flying the LM. To answer your other questions or objections, please take a look at this page by the Bad Astonomer: Phil Plait's Bad Astronomy: Bad TV In it, he answers all the common questions, so he can probably answer your question. You may also want to check out this page as well: Third-party evidence for Apollo Moon landings - Wikipedia All of the objections to the moon landings have been answered ad nauseum, and none of them have any merit whatsoever. EDIT: You are posting the exact same text on multiple threads. Please confine your posts to one thread.
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All these ideas…are chained to the existence of men, to who[m]…they owe their existence. Precisely in this case the preservation of these definite races and men is the precondition for the existence of these ideas. --Adolf Hitler Last edited by Nikola Bijeliti; July 4th, 2019 at 10:47 PM. |
July 5th, 2019 | #5 |
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Neil Armstrong was always cordial and soft-spoken. Buzz Aldrin wasn't quite so, as shown by this video of him punching Moon hoax theorist and filmmaker Bart Sibrel in 2002.
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"Military men are dumb, stupid animals to be used as pawns for foreign policy." --Henry A. Kissinger, jewish politician and advisor |
July 31st, 2019 | #6 |
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"Military men are dumb, stupid animals to be used as pawns for foreign policy." --Henry A. Kissinger, jewish politician and advisor |
August 1st, 2019 | #7 |
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Neil Armstrong was always cordial and soft-spoken. Buzz Aldrin wasn't quite so, as shown by this video of him punching Moon hoax theorist and filmmaker Bart Sibrel in 2002.
Being a big drinker, he was called "Buzzed" Aldrin for a reason. |
August 2nd, 2019 | #8 |
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Edwin Aldrin got the nickname "Buzz" from his two older sisters when he was a baby. They were calling him "little brother"-- it came out as "buzzer" then got shortened to "Buzz." He legally changed his name from Edwin to Buzz Aldrin. It's true he became depressed and had a drinking problem after he came back to Earth after Apollo 11, as detailed in his book Return To Earth.
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"Military men are dumb, stupid animals to be used as pawns for foreign policy." --Henry A. Kissinger, jewish politician and advisor |
August 2nd, 2019 | #9 | |
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Quote:
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Political correctness is oppression disguised as good manners. |
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