The Moon — Did Man Step Foot On It Or Not?
I've a simple answer that settles it once and forever.
Bone and muscle density. Neil Armstrong would’ve been like Superman in the low-gravity environment of the Moon, however, he couldn't manage a stride any greater than the one he’d take in his own backyard. Strange. This super-being could flip a small car and leap tall buildings. Instead, we're shown some lame guy who takes one very ordinary step for mankind.
What?
It's a naive way of measuring the implausibility of the event/s known as Moon Landing/s, but it's valid. Think about it. Armstrong has the power to jump a hundred feet at a time and scoot up a ladder will a single push but he doesn't. He steps around like you and I do but a lot slower. It looks pathetic. I don't get it. Was that the Moon Landing or not?
Before you take a trip over to Youtube to review the footage of space-dressed humans bouncing around the surface of what is claimed to be the Moon, bear in mind, it all appears to be running in slow-motion. Interesting. The Moon has low gravity, not warped time. What’s the deal? And when the footage is returned to a more natural-looking speed, Armstrong’s movements are no different to what we’d see here on Earth.
One final proof of this long-lasting lie is the relationship we don’t have with the Moon. We've totally left it alone. That’s not like us. Once we conquer something, we exploit it. We capitalize on everything it has to offer. By now, we should have a laboratory, a factory, cell towers and a large McDonald’s Billboard facing towards Earth. The absence of activity says a lot. We’re talking about going to Mars and haven’t even set up anything on the Moon, not even a trial habitat for training purposes?
Mars? Oh, yeah. That’s right. Here's our Moon but we don’t want that place, we want Mars instead? Why skip over the Moon? The Moon would be a nice stopover, don’t you think?
’Cause, we can’t go to either of them. That’s why. Humans can say anything about going anywhere but that doesn’t mean they can go there. They can’t and haven’t gone to either region.
Robots and rovers go to these places. Our limitation is a low Earth orbit. We can’t go any further due to the radiation that permeates the space outside it. It penetrates everything and destroys flesh and bone when it does it. The Earth’s atmosphere stops it and protects us. We can’t get into space today and we most definitely couldn’t do it back then. We never went to the Moon. It was a lie.