[DNS] Nothing to do with domains but interesting none the less

[DNS] Nothing to do with domains but interesting none the less

From: james gamm <jagam§bigpond.com>
Date: Wed, 25 Oct 2000 14:19:30 +1000
-----Original Message-----
From: tasos.gazis&#167;customs.gov.au <tasos.gazis§customs.gov.au>
To: JAGAM&#167;bigpond.com <JAGAM§bigpond.com>
Date: Wednesday, 25 October 2000 12:18
Subject: RE:





Interesting...



> THE ULTIMATE CONSPIRACY THEORY.
> (you gotta read this)
>
> Did man really walk on the Moon or was it the ultimate camera trick,
> asks David Milne?  The great lunar lie. In the early hours of May
> 16, 1990, after a week spent watching old video footage of man on the
> Moon,
> a thought was turning into an obsession in the mind of Ralph Rene.
>
> "How can the flag be fluttering," the 47 year old American kept asking
> himself, "when there's no wind on the atmosphere free Moon?"
> That moment was to be the beginning of an incredible Space
> odyssey for the self-taught engineer from New Jersey.
>
> He started investigating the Apollo Moon landings, scouring
> every NASA film, photo and report with a growing sense of wonder,
until
> finally reaching an awesome conclusion: America had never put a man on
> the Moon.
>
> The giant leap for mankind was fake. It is of course the conspiracy
> theory to end all conspiracy theories. But Rene has now put all his
> findings into a startling book entitled NASA Mooned America. Published
by
> himself, it's being sold by mail order - and is a compelling read.
>
> The story lifts off in 1961 with Russia firing Yuri Gagarin into
space,
> leaving a panicked America trailing in the  space  race. At an
emergency
> meeting of Congress, President Kennedy proposed the ultimate
> face saver, put a man on the Moon.  With an impassioned speech he
secured
> the plan an unbelievable 40 billion dollars.
>
> And so, says Rene  (and  a  growing  number of astro-physicists are
> beginning  to  agree  with  him), the great Moon hoax was
> born. Between 1969 and 1972, seven Apollo ships headed to the Moon.
Six
> claim to have made it, with the ill fated Apollo 13 - whose oxygen
tanks
> apparently
> exploded halfway - being the only casualties.  But with the exception
> of the known rocks, which could have been easily mocked up in a lab,
the
> photographs and film footage are the only proof that the Eagle ever
> landed.
> And Rene believes they're fake. For a start, he says, the TV footage
> was hopeless.
>
> The world tuned in to watch what looked like two blurred white ghosts
> gambol through rocks and dust. Part of the reason for the low quality
> was that, strangely, NASA provided no direct link up. So networks
> actually had to film "man's greatest achievement" from a TV screen in
> Houston - a deliberate ploy, says Rene, so that nobody could properly
> examine it.
>
> By contrast, the still photos were stunning. Yet that's just the
problem.
> The astronauts took thousands of pictures, each one perfectly exposed
> and sharply focused.  Not one was badly composed or even blurred.
> As Rene points out, that's not all:
>
> *    The cameras had no white meters or view ponders. So the
astronauts
> achieved this feat without being able to see what they were doing.
> *    There film stock was unaffected by the intense peaks and powerful
> cosmic radiation on the Moon, conditions that should have made it
useless.
> *    They managed to adjust their cameras, change film and swap
filters
> in pressurized clubs. It should have been almost impossible without
the
> use
> of their fingers.
>
> Award winning British photographer David Persey is convinced the
> pictures are fake.  His astonishing findings are explained alongside
the
> pictures on these pages, but the basic points are as follows:
> *     The shadows could only have been created with multiple light
sources
> and, in particular, powerful spotlights. But the only light source on
the
> Moon was the sun.
> *    The American flag and the words "United States" are always
brightly
> lit, even when everything around is in shadow.
> *    Not one still picture matches the film footage, yet NASA claims
both
> were shot at the same time.
> *    The pictures are so perfect each one would have taken a slick
> advertising agency hours to put them together. But the astronauts
>  managed it repeatedly.
>
> David Persey  believes  the  mistakes  were deliberate, left there
> by "whistle blowers", who were keen for the truth to one day get out.
>
> If Persey is right and the pictures are fake,  then we've only NASA's
word
> that man ever went to the Moon.  And, asks Rene, why would anyone
> fake pictures of an event that actually happened?
>
> The questions don't stop there. Outer space is awash with deadly
> radiation that emanates from solar flares firing out from the sun.
> Standard astronauts orbiting Earth in near space, like those who
> recently fixed the Hubble telescope, are protected by the Earth's Van
> Allen
> belt.  But the Moon is to 240,000 miles distant, way   outside  this
safe
> band. And, during the Apollo flights, astronomical   data   shows
there
> were no
> less than 1,485 such flares.
>
> John Mauldin, a physicist who works for NASA, once said shielding at
> least two meters thick would be needed. Yet the walls of the Lunar
> Landers,
> which took astronauts from the spaceship to the moons surface were,
said
> NASA, "about the thickness of heavy duty aluminium foil".  How could
that
> stop this deadly radiation?
>
> And if the astronauts were protected by their space suits, why
> didn't rescue workers use  such  protective  gear  at  the
> Chernobyl meltdown, which released  only a fraction of the dose
> astronauts would encounter? Not one Apollo astronaut ever contracted
> cancer - not even the Apollo 16 crew who were on their way to the Moon
> when
> a big flare started.
>
> "They should have been fried," says Rene.
>
> Furthermore, every Apollo mission before number 11 (the first to the
> Moon) was plagued with around 20,000 defects a-piece. Yet, with the
> exception of Apollo 13, NASA claims there wasn't one major technical
> problem on any of their Moon missions.  Just one effect could have
> blown the whole thing. "The odds against these are so unlikely that
God
> must
> have been the co-pilot," says Rene.
>
> Several years after NASA claimed its first Moon landing, Buzz Aldrin
> "the second man on the Moon" - was asked at a banquet what it felt
like
> to step on to the lunar surface.  Aldrin staggered to his feet and
left
> the room crying uncontrollably. It would not be the last time he did
this.
> "It strikes me he's suffering from trying to live out a very big lie,"
> says
> Rene.
>
> Aldrin may also fear for his life. Virgil Grissom, a NASA astronaut
> who baited the Apollo program, was due to pilot Apollo 1 as part of
the
> landings build up.  In January 1967, he hung a lemon on his Apollo
capsule
> (in the US, unroadworthy cars are called lemons) and told his wife
Betty:
> "if there is ever a serious accident in the space program, it's likely
to
> be
> me." Nobody knows what fuelled his fears,  but by the end of the month
he
> and his two co-pilots were dead,  burnt to death during a test run
when
> their capsule, pumped full of high pressure pure oxygen, exploded.
>
> Scientists couldn't believe NASA's carelessness  - even chemistry
students
> in high school know high pressure oxygen is extremely explosive.
> In fact, before the first manned Apollo fight even cleared the launch
pad,
> a total of 11 would-be astronauts were dead. Apart from the three who
were
> incinerated, seven died in plane crashes and one in a car smash. Now
this
> is a spectacular accident rate. "One wonders if these 'accidents'
weren't
> NASA's way of correcting mistakes," says Rene. "Of saying that some of
> these men didn't have the sort of 'right stuff' they were looking
> for."  NASA won't respond to any of these claims, their press office
will
> only say that the Moon landings happened and the pictures are real.
>
> But a NASA public affairs officer called Julian Scheer once delighted
200
> guests at a private party with footage of astronauts apparently on a
> landscape.  It had been made on a mission film set and was identical
to
> what
> NASA claimed was they real lunar landscape. "The purpose of this
film,"
> Scheer told the enthralled group, "is to indicate that you really can
fake
> things
> on the ground, almost to the point of deception."  He then invited his
> audience
> to "come to you own decision about whether or not man actually did
walk on
> the
> Moon".
>
> A sudden attack of honesty? You bet, says Rene, who claims the only
> real thing about the Apollo missions were the lift offs. The
astronauts
> simply have to be on board, he says, in case the rocket exploded.
>  "It  was the easiest way to ensure NASA wasn't left with three
> astronauts who ought to be dead," he claims, adding
> that they came down a day or so later, out of  the public eye
> (global surveillance wasn't what it is now) and into the safe
> hands of NASA officials, who whisked them off to prepare for the big
day a
> week later.
>
> And now NASA is planning another giant step - project Outreach, a
> 1 trillion dollar manned mission to Mars. "Think what they'll be able
> to mock up with today's computer graphics," says Rene chillingly.
> "Special effects was in its infancy in the 60s.  This time round we
will
> have no way of determining the truth."
>
> Space oddities:
> *    Apollo  14 astronaut Allen Shepard played golf on the Moon.  In
> front
> of a worldwide TV audience, Mission Control teased him about slicing
the
> ball to the right.  Yet a slice is caused by uneven air flow over the
> ball.
> The Moon has no atmosphere and no air.
> *    A camera panned upwards to catch Apollo 16's Lunar Lander lifting
> off the Moon. Who did the filming?
> *    One NASA picture from Apollo 11 is looking up at Neil Armstrong
> about to take his giant step for mankind. The photographer must have
been
> lying on the planet surface.  If Armstrong was the first man on the
Moon,
> then who took the shot?
> *    The pressure inside a space suit was greater than inside a
football.
> The astronauts should have been puffed out like the Michelin Man, but
> were seen freely bending their joints.
> *    The Moon landings took place during the Cold War. Why
> didn't America make a signal on the moon that could be seen from
earth?
> The
> PR would have been phenomenal and it could have been easily done with
> magnesium flares.
> *    Text from pictures in the article. Only two men walked on the
Moon
> during the Apollo 12 mission. Yet the astronaut reflected in the visor
has
> no camera. Who took the shot?
> *    The flags shadow goes behind the rock so doesn't match the dark
line
> in the foreground, which looks like a line cord. So the shadow to the
> lower
> right of the spaceman must be the flag. Where is his shadow?  And why
> is the flag fluttering?




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Thank you,
Standard & Poor's
Received on Wed Oct 25 2000 - 14:27:13 UTC

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