Spacecraft

Apollo 11
Photo Source: NASA

 

Apollo 11 Insignia

There we were in the middle of one of the greatest races in history, the race to land a person or persons on the Moon. It was a race between our captured German scientists and the Russian's captured scientists. Actually it was not really that simple, there were others involved, but there were sure a lot of captured German scientists involved too. President Truman had authorized Project Paperclip, which was a program to bring over captured German scientists that weren't deeply involved with the Nazis. This tenant was violated as some of our American scientists brought so much pressure to bear that people like Wernher von Braun, a major in the SS and someone that was accused of killing a slave laborer by a purported witness and a person who seemed to have the highest contacts in the Nazi party was brought over. True he was the genius behind the German rocket program, but should that have allowed him to get off Scott free? Anyway, he was the driving force behind our space program and it wasn't long before he was put in a position where he regularly issued orders to our American scientists.

The Apollo 11 was launched on July 16, 1969 and was the third time that humans had flown to the Moon, but it was the first time that they had actually landed on it. The crew consisted of the Commander, Neil Armstrong, Command Module Pilot, Michael Collins and Lunar Module Pilot, Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin. The first men to land on the Moon, landed there on July 20, 1969. They were Armstrong and Aldrin. Collins was piloting the orbiter above. As we know, Neil Armstrong was the first to step on Luna and he utter the famous words, "That's one small step for [a] man, one giant leap for mankind" As the lunar lander was landing he had uttered another phrase that became famous and that was "Houston, Tranquility Base here. The Eagle has landed."

There are a lot of stories going around that say that we didn't land on the Moon. Some of them may be based on the fact that NASA had taken photos of training sessions, where a mock up of the soil on the moon was present and the astronauts were in full gear practicing their moves ahead of time. I have included some of these photos that come directly from NASA, so that you can see them.

Let me reiterate, these are not photos of the astronauts on the Moon, they are training sessions on Earth. You can imagine how these could be doctored up by people who didn't want us to believe in the Moon Landings. Below are some more training simulations.

Notice how you can see people watching the simulation in the background. It would be a simple matter to black out the background and say that these were actual Moon photos and then skeptics could pick them apart to prove that we didn't land on the Moon. What is that standard that is hanging from a pole on the left, that is not the way the flag was displayed on the Moon?

Below are the real photos from NASA of the Moon Landing and the back of that standard that we can't see. According to a new book that was released called "Dark Mission', the standard that we see the back of is a Masonic standard.

 


The mission itself was not just recorded in photographs, we have video and audio and I have placed a few multimedia clips of both audio and video below. These files require the Quicktime player.

Above are some videos pertaining to the mission. If you can't play them, you can get a player and install it by going to the top of this page and clicking on "Free File Viewers For Movies, Photos, Audio, PDF, Word Clone "

I've included these additional files from the mission. They require the real player or the substitute player for Real files.

The Apollo 11 mission was the greatest feat that humans ever accomplished. It couldn't have been done without all the work and discoveries that led up to it. It was a miracle of technology at the time and was an amazing feat when you consider that the primitive computers that were on board were less capable than a modern camera. Were things about the mission kept from the general public? That point has been argued for years, ever since the mission was accomplished. I think that everyone here knows my feelings on the matter, but I respect other opinions and believe that everyone is entitled to think what they want. Will we repeat our success with a manned landing on Mars, some time in the near future? One can only hope so.



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