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21 answers

Not anymore, just another government conspiracy. Read up on it and you might think the same.

2007-06-07 09:39:49 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 8

confident on July 24, 1969. It became 1961. John F. Kennedy became the President of the U.S. He had to place a guy on the Moon. The U.S. had purely began attempting to place human beings in area. The Apollo 13 went into area July 24, 1969. Neil Armstrong grew to become the 1st guy to step on the Moon. properly there is a few documents.

2016-11-07 21:17:52 · answer #2 · answered by crandall 4 · 0 0

Yes because I covered the event along with 4,999 other members of print, radio and tv media sources live at Cape Caneveral, FL Kennedy Space Center or John H. Canaveral.
The oil dependent countries such as the USofA and the UAR very much feared space industrialization and colonization would kill or cause a switch in control of world economy by status quo and the murder of the first space shuttle backs my belief that it was indeed a conspiracy to warn off private enterprise via assassination of civilians, including the non-political and harmless teacher Christa McAuliffe. The second
shuttle disaster is directly related to this event and contributes to why I know longer believe America should be believed when it asserts it believes in integrity and fair play. More than likely the proof of this will be presented when all 5,000 of the original credentialed witnesses are getting their second interviews with the deceased crew members of both spacecraft are ashes to ashes, but it will get back to planet earth if only in the form of a eulogy for Sol III.

2007-06-07 09:59:27 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

Yes, yes, a thousand times yes. The "no moon landing" conspiracy idea was put forward by the Flat-Earth Society and reinforced by a badly-made Fox "documentary". Evidence abounds that the moon landings did take place, and all of the arguments put forward by people who think it was a hoax can be readily debunked.

Please visit http://www.clavius.org for comprehensive information.

2007-06-07 09:40:40 · answer #4 · answered by JLynes 5 · 4 1

Yes. Because I am friends with retired engineers (one who is out-of-retirement and sits in a cubicle across the aisle from me) who worked on equipment that is still on the moon, that worked very well when it was PLACED THERE BY HUMAN HANDS (for which there is no other way for the equipment to have worked, at all).

The hoax believers don't have an answer for the perfectly aligned Laser mirrors and buried lunar seismographs that couldn't have been placed by unmanned probes.

.

2007-06-07 10:31:18 · answer #5 · answered by tlbs101 7 · 3 1

Yes I know they visited the moon ,they left a mirror there to range on with a laser . With this we could precisely measure the moon position. Also with possible 10,000 people involved do u think it could be kept a secrete. I don't think so.

2007-06-07 09:56:13 · answer #6 · answered by JOHNNIE B 7 · 4 1

I am still waiting for someone to convince me how several thousand people who worked on several moon missions can keep this a secret. Even without going to other evidence for moon landing, there is no way this many people could be so quiet for so many years.

2007-06-07 09:47:40 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 4 1

Yes

2007-06-07 09:46:51 · answer #8 · answered by Gumshoe 1 · 0 1

Of course not..! The moon itself is a government conspiracy. Also the Earth is flat and Elvis is working in a donut shop in Cleveland.

2007-06-07 10:32:05 · answer #9 · answered by Chug-a-Lug 7 · 3 1

There is no credible evidence against the truthfullness of the moon landing.

2007-06-07 09:39:34 · answer #10 · answered by Clawndike 4 · 2 0

We went to the MOON! Op gotta go Spiderman is here to drink some beer.

2007-06-07 19:32:35 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

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