Quote:
Then again no one's talked on JFK after all these years.
But someone did talk. Mr X explained the whole plot to Jim Garrison!
(There is at least one Texags poster who believes that was a factual event)
Quote:
Then again no one's talked on JFK after all these years.
From earlier:Daddy said:
Always believed in the landing
But like Rogan there are some things that make you doubt. Besides of course how much our govt has lied to us. Immensely
Best argument for it
Russia and everyone would scream bloody Murder you faked it. This has no #2.
Hard for someone not to talk. Then again no one's talked on JFK after all these years.
Best argument against it
Easy
It's been over 50 years, we have more technology in our watch from Apple that all the computers combined. Not only has the United States not gone back but not one other country. The rocket technology, the computers to solve the calculations and math,
The material technology, the radio and video technology.
So much greater. 10x better? Computers 10000x better.
Noones gone or tried.
Photos no stars in the background despite no atmosphere?
Here's a science question and I asked the guy at NASA when I took my kids there 7, or 8 years ago
It takes roughly 25,000 miles an hour to escape the Earth's gravitational force
What speed is required to escape the moons? Ive read it's roughly 20% so that's 5000 mph
Could that little lunar ship get to that speed? That's faster than a sr 71 and that plane has 2 huge engines and tons of fuel. I understand their gravity is much lower but you still got to get to that speed.
Ag with kids said:What benefit is there to putting a man on the moon again?BlueTaze said:
If we don't put a man on the moon in 2027, 30, 35, or 40, do you think it would be time to be skeptical?
Other than to prove a bunch of conspiracy nuts wrong...
Well, then, what are these "lots" of reasons?BlueTaze said:Ag with kids said:What benefit is there to putting a man on the moon again?BlueTaze said:
If we don't put a man on the moon in 2027, 30, 35, or 40, do you think it would be time to be skeptical?
Other than to prove a bunch of conspiracy nuts wrong...
Lots of reasons.
A lot more benefits than funding foreign wars. But I see there is now a DEI element, so maybe thats reason for current delay.
https://www.nasa.gov/humans-in-space/artemis/
BlueTaze said:Ag with kids said:What benefit is there to putting a man on the moon again?BlueTaze said:
If we don't put a man on the moon in 2027, 30, 35, or 40, do you think it would be time to be skeptical?
Other than to prove a bunch of conspiracy nuts wrong...
Lots of reasons.
A lot more benefits than funding foreign wars. But I see there is now a DEI element, so maybe thats reason for current delay.
https://www.nasa.gov/humans-in-space/artemis/
But not hot enough to melt the heat shield. Which is why they protected the metal with heat shields.torrid said:
I'm so torn here. The heat of re-entry IS enough to melt metal.
Zero reasons.BlueTaze said:Ag with kids said:What benefit is there to putting a man on the moon again?BlueTaze said:
If we don't put a man on the moon in 2027, 30, 35, or 40, do you think it would be time to be skeptical?
Other than to prove a bunch of conspiracy nuts wrong...
Lots of reasons.
A lot more benefits than funding foreign wars. But I see there is now a DEI element, so maybe thats reason for current delay.
https://www.nasa.gov/humans-in-space/artemis/
Yeah, that's one a collection of hilarious arguments I regularly see that baffles me, just like the "flag is waving" one too, because it blows my mind that they think NASA would put those out if the landing was really faked. Those are exactly the kinds of things that would be artificially "corrected" if it was faked because they're so obvious. This whole thing is kind of maddening, this insistence from people who know nothing about what they're talking about that they can "see through the deception" because they want to just be contrarian. And then they ask how a small descent vehicle on the moon can go faster than an SR-71 on earth.TXAG 05 said:
Always love the "no stars in the pictures" excuse. Take a picture of something at night without a long exposure time and see if there are any stars.
You must not have asked an engineer. There is no friction due to air in space.Daddy said:
Here's a science question and I asked the guy at NASA when I took my kids there 7, or 8 years ago
It takes roughly 25,000 miles an hour to escape the Earth's gravitational force
What speed is required to escape the moons? Ive read it's roughly 20% so that's 5000 mph
Could that little lunar ship get to that speed? That's faster than a sr 71 and that plane has 2 huge engines and tons of fuel. I understand their gravity is much lower but you still got to get to that speed.
Ag with kids said:Well, then, what are these "lots" of reasons?BlueTaze said:Ag with kids said:What benefit is there to putting a man on the moon again?BlueTaze said:
If we don't put a man on the moon in 2027, 30, 35, or 40, do you think it would be time to be skeptical?
Other than to prove a bunch of conspiracy nuts wrong...
Lots of reasons.
A lot more benefits than funding foreign wars. But I see there is now a DEI element, so maybe thats reason for current delay.
https://www.nasa.gov/humans-in-space/artemis/
It costs hundreds of billions of dollars to do it.
And at the end, you have someone on the moon. Which we've done multiple times. Yay???
Daddy said:
Here's a science question and I asked the guy at NASA when I took my kids there 7, or 8 years ago
It takes roughly 25,000 miles an hour to escape the Earth's gravitational force
What speed is required to escape the moons? Ive read it's roughly 20% so that's 5000 mph
Could that little lunar ship get to that speed? That's faster than a sr 71 and that plane has 2 huge engines and tons of fuel. I understand their gravity is much lower but you still got to get to that speed.
True.DeLaHonta said:
Why are you guys so focused on debating if the Moon landing was real when we still haven't established that the Moon itself is real?
I never said there were NO benefits. Sure, you could always find something like "advancing science" or something like that.BlueTaze said:Ag with kids said:Well, then, what are these "lots" of reasons?BlueTaze said:Ag with kids said:What benefit is there to putting a man on the moon again?BlueTaze said:
If we don't put a man on the moon in 2027, 30, 35, or 40, do you think it would be time to be skeptical?
Other than to prove a bunch of conspiracy nuts wrong...
Lots of reasons.
A lot more benefits than funding foreign wars. But I see there is now a DEI element, so maybe thats reason for current delay.
https://www.nasa.gov/humans-in-space/artemis/
It costs hundreds of billions of dollars to do it.
And at the end, you have someone on the moon. Which we've done multiple times. Yay???
Natural resources, moon base station to further other exploration and testing of space tech, refueling/powering other endeavors.
But if you and ATM think there are zero reasons other than proving we did it with Apollo that's pretty funny. That would mean the ONLY reason in your mind with original moon landing was to win the cold war with Soviets, which would ironically fuel the denier's arguement that it was all optics propaganda for geopolitical gain.
If you wanna argue cost/benefit, fine. But to claim there are no benefits or reasons is pretty ridiculous.
I'll post it again:fc2112 said:You must not have asked an engineer. There is no friction due to air in space.Daddy said:
Here's a science question and I asked the guy at NASA when I took my kids there 7, or 8 years ago
It takes roughly 25,000 miles an hour to escape the Earth's gravitational force
What speed is required to escape the moons? Ive read it's roughly 20% so that's 5000 mph
Could that little lunar ship get to that speed? That's faster than a sr 71 and that plane has 2 huge engines and tons of fuel. I understand their gravity is much lower but you still got to get to that speed.
I am an aerospace engineer, and I can tell you that the overwhelmingly vast majority of loads on an airframe come from interaction with the air. Even in 9G pullouts and other high speed maneuvers, the distributed aerodynamic loads dominate every load case compared to the inertia loads.
In space, those components are - zero. AND - the energy going into developing speed is not reduced at all by drag, so as long as you apply an impulse from the engine, the craft keeps accelerating. Very small engines can achieve very large velocities that way.
There is no valid argument against saying we went to the moon. It just makes a person look dumb to even entertain such a thought.
Quote:
From earlier:
" only further reinforces the fact that there's a knowledge gulf that won't be crossed here."
Natural resources? You realize that a Saturn V launch cost almost $3.5B each (in 2024 dollars)? And they only brought back about 100kg of moon rocks? We actually left MORE resources on the moon than we came back with. That would be the worst investment in the history of mankind. And all the other stuff you mentioned would be about as bad as investments as that. The cost benefit of all of that would be HUGE cost and nearly no benefit.BlueTaze said:Natural resources, moon base station to further other exploration and testing of space tech, refueling/powering other endeavors.Ag with kids said:Well, then, what are these "lots" of reasons?BlueTaze said:Ag with kids said:What benefit is there to putting a man on the moon again?BlueTaze said:
If we don't put a man on the moon in 2027, 30, 35, or 40, do you think it would be time to be skeptical?
Other than to prove a bunch of conspiracy nuts wrong...
Lots of reasons.
A lot more benefits than funding foreign wars. But I see there is now a DEI element, so maybe thats reason for current delay.
https://www.nasa.gov/humans-in-space/artemis/
It costs hundreds of billions of dollars to do it.
And at the end, you have someone on the moon. Which we've done multiple times. Yay???
But if you and ATM think there are zero reasons other than proving we did it with Apollo that's pretty funny. That would mean the ONLY reason in your mind with original moon landing was to win the cold war with Soviets, which would ironically fuel the denier's arguement that it was all optics propaganda for geopolitical gain.
If you wanna argue cost/benefit, fine. But to claim there are no benefits or reasons is pretty ridiculous.
Many argued that we should only go there once. Including a few people at NASA.BlueTaze said:
You questioned if there were any reasons other than to say we did it. It's quoted in your post. Now, you are pivoting to a seperate cost benefit arguement when coming to the realization it was a dumb post. Classic F16.
Then you top it off with an arguement that Apollo was all a display of geopolitical theater to one up the Soviets. That could be achieved with one landing, why 6?
I'm sorry but your arguments just come off like doubting that we ever had a real space shuttle because we quit using them, too.BlueTaze said:
You questioned if there were any reasons other than to say we did it. It's quoted in your post. Now, you are pivoting to a seperate cost benefit arguement when coming to the realization it was a dumb post. Classic F16.
Then you top it off with an arguement that Apollo was all a display of geopolitical theater to one up the Soviets. That could be achieved with one landing, why 6?
Satellite of Love said:
BlueTaze is a denier. He's trying his hardest to not out right make it seem that way by his convoluted posts. He sprinkles in denier logic here and there.
aTmAg said:
And it WAS just for optics and geopolitical gain. It was to prove that our system of government was superior to theirs.
BlueTaze said:Satellite of Love said:
BlueTaze is a denier. He's trying his hardest to not out right make it seem that way by his convoluted posts. He sprinkles in denier logic here and there.
Would you like to provide a quote of mine here that suggests I'm a "denier", or maybe a convoluted post that I can break down in a way that even you would understand?
Quote:
The US hasn't even officially debunked the wet market theory on COVID and confirmed it came from a lab. In fact, the US gov actively pushed a lie. They knowingly pushed a lie about wet market to preserve funding and prevent focus on the source.
That tells you all you need to know....also.
I imagine that NASA of the 60's was much closer to the SpaceX of today.While the NASA of today more closely resembles the DMV than the NASA of the 60's. Decades of bureaucratic bloat and regulation make it impossible to do what was achievable 50 years ago with seemingly primitive technology.torrid said:
The 1960s were the perfect mix of cold war, emerging technology, and the need to inspire a fractured nation that allowed a huge program like the moon landing to exist.
A moon landing denier calling somebody else dumb? That is rich.BlueTaze said:I'm not pumped about the Artemis program, as we have a major debt problem that needs to be addressed. However, for you to say it's the worst investment of mankind, with no reason other than to say we went, is nuts. You have to be trolling, you can't really be that dumb.aTmAg said:
And it WAS just for optics and geopolitical gain. It was to prove that our system of government was superior to theirs.
Every penny taxed and spent on stuff like moon bases is money that could have been invested in factories to build more stuff to make our lives vastly better. Our lives are not improved at all by having a moon base. Even the supposed "technological" improvements argument is bogus. The private sector is much better at technological innovation than the government will ever be. Just look where we have advanced and where we have not. It's no accident that we have advanced very quickly in electronics and that is one of the few sectors where government is absent.Quote:
I can think of tons of gov expenditures that are much worse than a moon base. Instead of doubling down, you should have just said you were being sarcastic or joking. Now I know you really think that nonsense.
Is this supposed to be a good point? JFK was not a foreign policy genius. Most of his "triumphs" were him cleaning his own mess.Quote:
I suppose in your view, this JFK speech was also just political theater to beat the Soviets, prove we could do something they couldn't, so there would be a nuke stand down.
Im Gipper said:
It's 2024. No one is buying the "I'm just asking questions" schtick.
aTmAg said:
You act like the divide is between people who think the chance of the moon landing being faked is .000001% vs those who think it is 0%. That's not the divide.
The divide is between people like you who throw out ridiculous assertions (posed as "questions") about stars, wavey flags, lunar escape velocity, lack of recent missions, etc. that are all easily disproven and answered vs people like me who understand that those assertions are all hilariously stupid.
aTmAg said:
The divide is between people like you who throw out ridiculous assertions (posed as "questions") about stars, wavey flags, lunar escape velocity, lack of recent missions, etc. that are all easily disproven and answered vs people like me who understand that those assertions are all hilariously stupid.
Joes said:
Exactly. It's worse than being dumb, when every post is a smiling face the whole intention is just to annoy people. This is not a serious person or discussion and is not worth the time any more.