The U.S. is not as conformist as it often appears. For example, 61 percent of Americans believe Oswald did not act alone. About 32 percent of Americans did not submit to the jab. And then there’s the moon landing.
A July 1970 poll found 30 percent of Americans declaring Apollo 11 to be a fake. Today — 53 years later — at least 10% of Americans still believe astronauts never landed on the moon.
Many years ago, I read the iconic underground book, “We Never Went to the Moon,” by Bill Kaysing. It opened my mind and I’ve kept it open — just in case. And guess what? There’s enough public evidence to inspire anyone to at least wonder.
Join me as we focus on two examples of that evidence:
“Erased” videotapes
“Lost” technology
Two minutes on “erased” videotapes:
Consider a July 17, 2009 article by Seth Borenstein of the Associated Press, “NASA lost video of moon landing.” In this astonishing piece of journalism [sic], we’re asked to believe that NASA accidentally taped over the original Apollo 11 moon footage because it needed to reuse the videotapes!
NASA senior engineer Dick Nafzger explained the “inescapable conclusion” that 45 tapes of the Apollo 11 video were erased and reused. That’s why they had to hire Hollywood to edit the existing TV footage in 2009.
“There’s nothing being created; there’s nothing being manufactured,” Nafzger assured at the time — which sounds exactly like what someone would publicly say if they hired Hollywood types to doctor and fabricate footage.
“It’s surprising to me that NASA didn’t have the common sense to save perhaps the most important historical footage of the 20th century,” declared Rice University historian Douglas Brinkley in 2009.
Ya think?
In an age of non-stop technological developments, we’re being told that the U.S. has not returned to the moon because someone destroyed the technology and it cannot be replicated.
Listen to Don Pettit here (14 seconds):
How this dude keeps a straight face is beyond me.
Again, ponder the technology pioneered since Apollo 17 was the final moon mission in December 1972. Then ask yourself: So, they could supposedly send manned flights 238,900 miles away between 1969 and 1972 but they somehow lost the technology and it’s just too “painful” to try again now?
By comparison, imagine if every single cell phone was confiscated and destroyed today. Next, imagine that someone who works for a cellphone company announces — in the year 2073 — that they can never rebuild a smartphone because the technology was gone and all original videos of cellphones were deleted.
While you’re at it, factor in the reality that the parasites in charge lie and deceive about literally everything, 24/7.
And you wanna tell me you don’t at least have a few questions?
It's all so bewildering and clearly deliberately demoralizing. But imagine if we were only ruled by the kinds of people who sought desperately to become class president in high school (ambitious fools enabled by widespread indifference). Would that be any better?
At the time, the risk of failure was too high. It had to be faked to ensure perceived success.