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Science Forum Index » Astronomy Forum » More evidence proving Apollo Hoax
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Message |
| Peter Webb |
Posted: Fri Apr 25, 2008 7:46 pm |
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Guest
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"BradGuth" <bradguth@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:38b59fd6-5984-4920-abc0-15e1f9af3c90@q1g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
That link goes to one of your rants on a different forum.
I don't think Usenet lacks interest in Jaxa; I think Usenet lacks interest
in Brad Guth.
HTH |
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| BradGuth |
Posted: Fri Apr 25, 2008 7:48 pm |
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Guest
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On Apr 25, 6:25 pm, "Peter Webb"
<webbfam...@DIESPAMDIEoptusnet.com.au> wrote:
Quote: "BradGuth" <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:15833263-e436-4bf7-a90e-d2d7e220316b@v26g2000prm.googlegroups.com...
On Apr 25, 5:46 pm, "Peter Webb"
webbfam...@DIESPAMDIEoptusnet.com.au> wrote:
"BradGuth" <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:38b59fd6-5984-4920-abc0-15e1f9af3c90@q1g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
Why the lack of Usenet/Group interest in anything JAXA SELENE?
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.astronomy/browse_frm/thread/3a4022...
Brad Guth
That link goes to one of your rants on a different forum.
I don't think Usenet lacks interest in Jaxa; I think Usenet lacks
interest
in Brad Guth.
HTH
That's to be expected.
Since JAXA/Selene is all about our moon, and soon enough orbiting at
merely 10 km with those TC optics recording that physically dark
surface at one meter/pixel, and therefore why is it not worthy of your
expertise?
It is. Post some images of the landing sites. If there aren't any, what is
the relevance?
JAXA/Selene has by now at least dozens if not hundreds of their crisp
and clear TC frames per given landing site. Oddly they are not
sharing. In fact, even their wide/telephoto HDTV images are extremely
limited and having been frame by frame modified in order to exclude
most of the lunar mineral hue/color saturations, as well as utilizing
a minimal amount of the available dynamic range.
Quote:
Even at 10 m/pixel is more than good enough as is.
. - Brad Guth
No, I supplied the calculations showing it was nowhere near good enough.
Still the same old silly brown-nosed boy, are you not.
Quote:
Of course, if you would like to post the highest resolution photos of the
landing sites that you have access to, I could go through the physics with
an actual example.
So why don't you do that?
They're all available from JAXA. Why don't you ask for yourself, or
wait until unavoidably they can't help but deliver those 1m/pixel
images. Of course China can always dive in for the same or better
resolution.
.. - Brad Guth |
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| BradGuth |
Posted: Fri Apr 25, 2008 7:52 pm |
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Guest
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On Apr 25, 10:19 pm, Eric Gisse <jowr...@gmail.com> wrote:
Quote: On Apr 25, 11:40 am, Koobee Wublee <koobee.wub...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Apr 22, 12:04 am, Eric Gisse wrote:
On Apr 21, 10:53 pm, Koobee Wublee wrote:
The task could be achieved through unmanned missions not necessarily
short men painted green. <shrug
What "unmanned missions" ?
Missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van Allen
Belts. <shrug
Again - what "unmanned missions" are you talking about?
What is the nonsense about the Soviet spy antenna records? Is that
where you got these little green men from?
How do you suppose these Apollo astronauts with 0.25g/cm^2 of shield
is going to come up totally unharmed after being bombarded with 3E-14
solar mass per year of energy? Little green men reported from
unclassified Soviet antenna spy whatever archive?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_wind
The higher energy particles would damage your DNA with higher
probability of causing some sorts of cancer in a few years. The lower-
energy ones would manifest shorter term illness. It is not advisable
to be bombarded with 3E-14 solar mass per year of energy at earth’s
orbit with just 0.25g/cm^2 of shielding from the command module.
shrug
Oh this again? You were proven wrong with the actual ACE/SOHO
spacecraft data and here you are repeating the same shit again.
Oh, the same garbage from fat Gisse again. You were pointed out of
your bullsh*t errors many times over. Get lost. Don’t come back
before you actually understand the stuff you came up with.
Nope - you farted and ran away from the discussion because you
couldn't even read the data sheets.
In the meantime, the Chinese are ‘going back to the moon’. I wonder
if they will play the game along and be content with being second.
This would be very easy to do. All you need is a decent special
effect director. Or would they expose and embarrass NASA?
The only farts here are those pesky semitic and DARPA ones. (smells
exactly like a Hitler fart).
. - Brad Guth |
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| Peter Webb |
Posted: Fri Apr 25, 2008 8:25 pm |
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Guest
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"BradGuth" <bradguth@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:15833263-e436-4bf7-a90e-d2d7e220316b@v26g2000prm.googlegroups.com...
Quote: On Apr 25, 5:46 pm, "Peter Webb"
webbfam...@DIESPAMDIEoptusnet.com.au> wrote:
"BradGuth" <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:38b59fd6-5984-4920-abc0-15e1f9af3c90@q1g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
Why the lack of Usenet/Group interest in anything JAXA SELENE?
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.astronomy/browse_frm/thread/3a4022...
Brad Guth
That link goes to one of your rants on a different forum.
I don't think Usenet lacks interest in Jaxa; I think Usenet lacks
interest
in Brad Guth.
HTH
That's to be expected.
Since JAXA/Selene is all about our moon, and soon enough orbiting at
merely 10 km with those TC optics recording that physically dark
surface at one meter/pixel, and therefore why is it not worthy of your
expertise?
It is. Post some images of the landing sites. If there aren't any, what is
the relevance?
Quote: Even at 10 m/pixel is more than good enough as is.
. - Brad Guth
No, I supplied the calculations showing it was nowhere near good enough.
Of course, if you would like to post the highest resolution photos of the
landing sites that you have access to, I could go through the physics with
an actual example.
So why don't you do that? |
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| Koobee Wublee |
Posted: Fri Apr 25, 2008 8:42 pm |
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Guest
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On Apr 25, 10:19 pm, Eric Gisse wrote:
Quote: On Apr 25, 11:40 am, Koobee Wublee wrote:
Missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van Allen
Belts. <shrug
Again - what "unmanned missions" are you talking about?
Again, missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van
Allen Belts. <shrug>
Quote: Oh, the same garbage from fat Gisse again. You were pointed out of
your bullsh*t errors many times over. Get lost. Don’t come back
before you actually understand the stuff you came up with.
Nope - you farted and ran away from the discussion because you
couldn't even read the data sheets.
Not quiet, you failed to understand the material I have presented, and
worst of all you also failed to understand the materials you pulled
out. That is why knowing a few buzz words cannot get you that college
degree. That is why you are an n’th-year (which I have lost count)
super senior at the very prestigious university of Alaska. <shrug>
Quote: In the meantime, the Chinese are ‘going back to the moon’. I wonder
if they will play the game along and be content with being second.
This would be very easy to do. All you need is a decent special
effect director. Or would they expose and embarrass NASA? |
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| Back to top |
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| BradGuth |
Posted: Fri Apr 25, 2008 9:38 pm |
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Guest
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On Apr 25, 11:42 pm, Koobee Wublee <koobee.wub...@gmail.com> wrote:
Quote: On Apr 25, 10:19 pm, Eric Gisse wrote:
On Apr 25, 11:40 am, Koobee Wublee wrote:
Missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van Allen
Belts. <shrug
Again - what "unmanned missions" are you talking about?
Again, missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van
Allen Belts. <shrug
Oh, the same garbage from fat Gisse again. You were pointed out of
your bullsh*t errors many times over. Get lost. Don’t come back
before you actually understand the stuff you came up with.
Nope - you farted and ran away from the discussion because you
couldn't even read the data sheets.
Not quiet, you failed to understand the material I have presented, and
worst of all you also failed to understand the materials you pulled
out. That is why knowing a few buzz words cannot get you that college
degree. That is why you are an n’th-year (which I have lost count)
super senior at the very prestigious university of Alaska. <shrug
In the meantime, the Chinese are ‘going back to the moon’. I wonder
if they will play the game along and be content with being second.
This would be very easy to do. All you need is a decent special
effect director. Or would they expose and embarrass NASA?
Apollo LEO was certainly doable, although the Saturn 5 package should
have been capable of accomplishing a brief visit into the moon's L1 as
having been technically doable, as well as for sending those robotic/
unmanned portions on towards orbiting and one-way impacting with the
moon, with some of their most robust instruments surviving their hard/
impact deployments.
If need be, those custom S-Band transponders could have made it seem
by all of terrestrial accounts as though they'd been orbiting Mars.
In other kind words, and of unmanned efforts, there is Apollo stuff on
the moon.
. - Brad Guth |
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| BradGuth |
Posted: Sat Apr 26, 2008 6:58 am |
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Guest
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On Apr 26, 6:04 am, "Peter Webb"
<webbfam...@DIESPAMDIEoptusnet.com.au> wrote:
Quote: "BradGuth" <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:682333e9-5c20-4b44-9aa9-a3bdde4ffc62@y18g2000pre.googlegroups.com...
On Apr 25, 6:25 pm, "Peter Webb"
webbfam...@DIESPAMDIEoptusnet.com.au> wrote:
"BradGuth" <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:15833263-e436-4bf7-a90e-d2d7e220316b@v26g2000prm.googlegroups.com...
On Apr 25, 5:46 pm, "Peter Webb"
webbfam...@DIESPAMDIEoptusnet.com.au> wrote:
"BradGuth" <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:38b59fd6-5984-4920-abc0-15e1f9af3c90@q1g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
Why the lack of Usenet/Group interest in anything JAXA SELENE?
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.astronomy/browse_frm/thread/3a4022...
Brad Guth
That link goes to one of your rants on a different forum.
I don't think Usenet lacks interest in Jaxa; I think Usenet lacks
interest
in Brad Guth.
HTH
That's to be expected.
Since JAXA/Selene is all about our moon, and soon enough orbiting at
merely 10 km with those TC optics recording that physically dark
surface at one meter/pixel, and therefore why is it not worthy of your
expertise?
It is. Post some images of the landing sites. If there aren't any, what
is
the relevance?
JAXA/Selene has by now at least dozens if not hundreds of their crisp
and clear TC frames per given landing site.
Why do you believe this is true?
Oddly they are not
sharing. In fact, even their wide/telephoto HDTV images are extremely
limited and having been frame by frame modified in order to exclude
most of the lunar mineral hue/color saturations, as well as utilizing
a minimal amount of the available dynamic range.
You say that the Japanese are falsifying wide view television images of the
moon. Why would they do that? What do you think they are hiding in these
images? Aliens from Area 41?
Real funny. Since it's the easily peer reviewed whole truth and
nothing but the truth, as otherwise easily proven by a fifth grader,
so why don't you tell us why JAXA changed their tune upon arriving
into the orbital mission. Why is JAXA holding back and otherwise
having to falsifying those wide and telephoto HDTV color images?
Quote:
Even at 10 m/pixel is more than good enough as is.
. - Brad Guth
No, I supplied the calculations showing it was nowhere near good enough.
Still the same old silly brown-nosed boy, are you not.
No, I am a mathematician with an interest in optics.
You wouldn't accept 0.1 m/pixel as worthy proof of anything going
against your pagan DARPA NASA/Apollo fiasco. So what's the
difference?
Quote:
Of course, if you would like to post the highest resolution photos of the
landing sites that you have access to, I could go through the physics
with
an actual example.
So why don't you do that?
They're all available from JAXA. Why don't you ask for yourself,
Because I am not trying to prove that Apollo was a hoax. If you want to use
photos as proof that it was a hoax, you really need to be able to produce
the photos. No photos, no evidence.
The joys of evidence exclusion. Up until recently it worked for the
USS LIBERTY fiasco, and of still ongoing as of more recently on behalf
of TWA flight 800, not to mention more than enough unanswered
questions about what brought us 911, as well as countless internal SEC
and Federal Reserve hocus-pocus issues that remain as taboo/
nondisclosure rated. You make a darn good DARPA minion, and rather
brown-nosed to boot.
Quote:
or
wait until unavoidably they can't help but deliver those 1m/pixel
images.
The images are 10m/pixel, and so would not possibly show the LEM.
Silly boy, are we not. Sounds rather much like Hitler saying "what
Jews", because from where he was standing couldn't possibly see one of
those yids, or any other member of innocent humanity, or otherwise
like our resident LLPOF warlord(GW Bush) stipulating them crazy
Muslims got WMD.
Quote:
Of course China can always dive in for the same or better
resolution.
Yes. If Apollo was a hoax, and there are so many ways it could be disproved,
funny that not one government has ever bother attempted to find out.
With recent Mars missions accomplishing better than 0.1 m/pixel,
therefore Japan, China or perhaps India should not have problems
accomplishing a few of those telephoto resolutions of 0.1 m/pixel from
100 km. Imagine their improved resolution from 10 km, especially as
extra nifty 3D angle of view via those TC configured optics, whereas
you always get loads more useful deductive observationology
information than by way of any 90 degree plan-view could possibly
deliver at ten fold better resolution.
. - Brad Guth |
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| BradGuth |
Posted: Sat Apr 26, 2008 7:09 am |
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Guest
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On Apr 26, 7:08 am, Bryan Olson <fakeaddr...@nowhere.org> wrote:
Quote: Koobee Wublee wrote:
On Apr 25, 10:19 pm, Eric Gisse wrote:
On Apr 25, 11:40 am, Koobee Wublee wrote:
Missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van Allen
Belts. <shrug
Again - what "unmanned missions" are you talking about?
Again, missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van
Allen Belts. <shrug
I think you misunderstand Eric's question. Your imaginary
missions could get imaginary ranging equipment to the Moon,
but the stuff is there in *reality*.
--
--Bryan
There is no question or argument that robotic deployments couldn't
have deployed such laser ranging equipment as passive optical
reflectors, of which do not even have to be those of any singular
array.
On an open field of such a nearly coal dark surface, even a bright and
shiny zone of impacted aluminum would be sufficient for doing the
trick. It's not hard to even intentionally deploy a good enough
dusting of such corner cube reflective items just prior to the primary
impact, so that the artificial crater produced cloud of electrostatic
charged dust doesn't entirely coat those items.
.. - Brad Guth |
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| Back to top |
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| Peter Webb |
Posted: Sat Apr 26, 2008 8:04 am |
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Guest
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"BradGuth" <bradguth@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:682333e9-5c20-4b44-9aa9-a3bdde4ffc62@y18g2000pre.googlegroups.com...
Quote: On Apr 25, 6:25 pm, "Peter Webb"
webbfam...@DIESPAMDIEoptusnet.com.au> wrote:
"BradGuth" <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:15833263-e436-4bf7-a90e-d2d7e220316b@v26g2000prm.googlegroups.com...
On Apr 25, 5:46 pm, "Peter Webb"
webbfam...@DIESPAMDIEoptusnet.com.au> wrote:
"BradGuth" <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:38b59fd6-5984-4920-abc0-15e1f9af3c90@q1g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
Why the lack of Usenet/Group interest in anything JAXA SELENE?
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.astronomy/browse_frm/thread/3a4022...
Brad Guth
That link goes to one of your rants on a different forum.
I don't think Usenet lacks interest in Jaxa; I think Usenet lacks
interest
in Brad Guth.
HTH
That's to be expected.
Since JAXA/Selene is all about our moon, and soon enough orbiting at
merely 10 km with those TC optics recording that physically dark
surface at one meter/pixel, and therefore why is it not worthy of your
expertise?
It is. Post some images of the landing sites. If there aren't any, what
is
the relevance?
JAXA/Selene has by now at least dozens if not hundreds of their crisp
and clear TC frames per given landing site.
Why do you believe this is true?
Quote: Oddly they are not
sharing. In fact, even their wide/telephoto HDTV images are extremely
limited and having been frame by frame modified in order to exclude
most of the lunar mineral hue/color saturations, as well as utilizing
a minimal amount of the available dynamic range.
You say that the Japanese are falsifying wide view television images of the
moon. Why would they do that? What do you think they are hiding in these
images? Aliens from Area 41?
Quote:
Even at 10 m/pixel is more than good enough as is.
. - Brad Guth
No, I supplied the calculations showing it was nowhere near good enough.
Still the same old silly brown-nosed boy, are you not.
No, I am a mathematician with an interest in optics.
Quote:
Of course, if you would like to post the highest resolution photos of the
landing sites that you have access to, I could go through the physics
with
an actual example.
So why don't you do that?
They're all available from JAXA. Why don't you ask for yourself,
Because I am not trying to prove that Apollo was a hoax. If you want to use
photos as proof that it was a hoax, you really need to be able to produce
the photos. No photos, no evidence.
Quote: or
wait until unavoidably they can't help but deliver those 1m/pixel
images.
The images are 10m/pixel, and so would not possibly show the LEM.
Quote: Of course China can always dive in for the same or better
resolution.
Yes. If Apollo was a hoax, and there are so many ways it could be disproved,
funny that not one government has ever bother attempted to find out.
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| Bryan Olson |
Posted: Sat Apr 26, 2008 9:08 am |
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Guest
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Koobee Wublee wrote:
Quote: On Apr 25, 10:19 pm, Eric Gisse wrote:
On Apr 25, 11:40 am, Koobee Wublee wrote:
Missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van Allen
Belts. <shrug
Again - what "unmanned missions" are you talking about?
Again, missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van
Allen Belts. <shrug
I think you misunderstand Eric's question. Your imaginary
missions could get imaginary ranging equipment to the Moon,
but the stuff is there in *reality*.
--
--Bryan |
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| Back to top |
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| Eric Gisse |
Posted: Sat Apr 26, 2008 4:34 pm |
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Guest
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On Apr 26, 9:09 am, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:
Quote: On Apr 26, 7:08 am, Bryan Olson <fakeaddr...@nowhere.org> wrote:
Koobee Wublee wrote:
On Apr 25, 10:19 pm, EricGissewrote:
On Apr 25, 11:40 am, Koobee Wublee wrote:
Missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van Allen
Belts. <shrug
Again - what "unmanned missions" are you talking about?
Again, missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van
Allen Belts. <shrug
I think you misunderstand Eric's question. Your imaginary
missions could get imaginary ranging equipment to the Moon,
but the stuff is there in *reality*.
--
--Bryan
There is no question or argument that robotic deployments couldn't
have deployed such laser ranging equipment as passive optical
reflectors, of which do not even have to be those of any singular
array.
On an open field of such a nearly coal dark surface, even a bright and
shiny zone of impacted aluminum would be sufficient for doing the
trick. It's not hard to even intentionally deploy a good enough
dusting of such corner cube reflective items just prior to the primary
impact, so that the artificial crater produced cloud of electrostatic
charged dust doesn't entirely coat those items.
. - Brad Guth
Again, what missions are you talking about? Do you have
any...evidence...that this took place, or is your only evidence the
fact that you don't believe they were put there as advertised? |
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| Eric Gisse |
Posted: Sat Apr 26, 2008 4:36 pm |
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Guest
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Koobee Wublee wrote:
Quote: On Apr 25, 10:19 pm, Eric Gisse wrote:
On Apr 25, 11:40 am, Koobee Wublee wrote:
Missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van Allen
Belts. <shrug
Again - what "unmanned missions" are you talking about?
Again, missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van
Allen Belts. <shrug
3rd time now - what missions? Are they imaginary missions that
happened only in your head, or missions that actually took place which
you have documentation of some kind in support?
Quote:
Oh, the same garbage from fat Gisse again. You were pointed out of
your bullsh*t errors many times over. Get lost. Don�t come back
before you actually understand the stuff you came up with.
Nope - you farted and ran away from the discussion because you
couldn't even read the data sheets.
Not quiet, you failed to understand the material I have presented, and
worst of all you also failed to understand the materials you pulled
out. That is why knowing a few buzz words cannot get you that college
degree. That is why you are an n�th-year (which I have lost count)
super senior at the very prestigious university of Alaska. <shrug
Not my fault you can't read basic instrument specifications or read
for comprehension.
Quote:
In the meantime, the Chinese are �going back to the moon�. I wonder
if they will play the game along and be content with being second.
This would be very easy to do. All you need is a decent special
effect director. Or would they expose and embarrass NASA? |
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| Back to top |
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| BradGuth |
Posted: Sat Apr 26, 2008 5:19 pm |
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Guest
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On Apr 26, 7:34 pm, Eric Gisse <jowr...@gmail.com> wrote:
Quote: On Apr 26, 9:09 am, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Apr 26, 7:08 am, Bryan Olson <fakeaddr...@nowhere.org> wrote:
Koobee Wublee wrote:
On Apr 25, 10:19 pm, EricGissewrote:
On Apr 25, 11:40 am, Koobee Wublee wrote:
Missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van Allen
Belts. <shrug
Again - what "unmanned missions" are you talking about?
Again, missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van
Allen Belts. <shrug
I think you misunderstand Eric's question. Your imaginary
missions could get imaginary ranging equipment to the Moon,
but the stuff is there in *reality*.
--
--Bryan
There is no question or argument that robotic deployments couldn't
have deployed such laser ranging equipment as passive optical
reflectors, of which do not even have to be those of any singular
array.
On an open field of such a nearly coal dark surface, even a bright and
shiny zone of impacted aluminum would be sufficient for doing the
trick. It's not hard to even intentionally deploy a good enough
dusting of such corner cube reflective items just prior to the primary
impact, so that the artificial crater produced cloud of electrostatic
charged dust doesn't entirely coat those items.
. - Brad Guth
Again, what missions are you talking about? Do you have
any...evidence...that this took place, or is your only evidence the
fact that you don't believe they were put there as advertised?
I have the exact same subjective evidence that you use in order to
claim everything went down exactly according to your NASA/Apollo
Qur'an, except that I'm deductively interpreting from that very same
basis of subjective data (that's missing all sorts of weird stuff that
shouldn't have been missed) in order to suit my version. So, thus far
at worse case we're even on that one, at best I'm still winning.
.. - Brad Guth |
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| BradGuth |
Posted: Sat Apr 26, 2008 5:21 pm |
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Guest
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On Apr 26, 7:36 pm, Eric Gisse <jowr...@gmail.com> wrote:
Quote: Koobee Wublee wrote:
On Apr 25, 10:19 pm, Eric Gisse wrote:
On Apr 25, 11:40 am, Koobee Wublee wrote:
Missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van Allen
Belts. <shrug
Again - what "unmanned missions" are you talking about?
Again, missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van
Allen Belts. <shrug
3rd time now - what missions? Are they imaginary missions that
happened only in your head, or missions that actually took place which
you have documentation of some kind in support?
Oh, the same garbage from fat Gisse again. You were pointed out of
your bullsh*t errors many times over. Get lost. Don�t come back
before you actually understand the stuff you came up with.
Nope - you farted and ran away from the discussion because you
couldn't even read the data sheets.
Not quiet, you failed to understand the material I have presented, and
worst of all you also failed to understand the materials you pulled
out. That is why knowing a few buzz words cannot get you that college
degree. That is why you are an n�th-year (which I have lost count)
super senior at the very prestigious university of Alaska. <shrug
Not my fault you can't read basic instrument specifications or read
for comprehension.
Why but of course, nothing on Earth or on the moon is ever your
fault.
. - Brad Guth |
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| Eric Gisse |
Posted: Sat Apr 26, 2008 6:02 pm |
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Guest
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On Apr 26, 7:21 pm, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:
Quote: On Apr 26, 7:36 pm, Eric Gisse <jowr...@gmail.com> wrote:
Koobee Wublee wrote:
On Apr 25, 10:19 pm, Eric Gisse wrote:
On Apr 25, 11:40 am, Koobee Wublee wrote:
Missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van Allen
Belts. <shrug
Again - what "unmanned missions" are you talking about?
Again, missions without sending men physically into or beyond the Van
Allen Belts. <shrug
3rd time now - what missions? Are they imaginary missions that
happened only in your head, or missions that actually took place which
you have documentation of some kind in support?
Oh, the same garbage from fat Gisse again. You were pointed out of
your bullsh*t errors many times over. Get lost. Don�t come back
before you actually understand the stuff you came up with.
Nope - you farted and ran away from the discussion because you
couldn't even read the data sheets.
Not quiet, you failed to understand the material I have presented, and
worst of all you also failed to understand the materials you pulled
out. That is why knowing a few buzz words cannot get you that college
degree. That is why you are an n�th-year (which I have lost count)
super senior at the very prestigious university of Alaska. <shrug
Not my fault you can't read basic instrument specifications or read
for comprehension.
Why but of course, nothing on Earth or on the moon is ever your
fault.
. - Brad Guth
The purpose of your reply eludes me. |
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