The Dark Side of the Moon: 40 years after moon landing the doubts persist
The Mirror | by Dennis Ellam | 14/02/2009
Was it all a hoax?
In the words Neil Armstrong chiselled into history, it was one small step for a man
But were the Moon landings really mankind's greatest scientific leap or the most fantastic hoax ever pulled?
The thrilling TV pictures, so faint and grey that we might have been peering at a ghost moving through a thick fog, certainly showed a bulky shape in a spacesuit backing down a ladder, stretching out a leg, tentatively putting one booted foot on to the surface.
The surface of where, though? The Moon or an elaborate mock-up in a movie studio somewhere in a remote corner of an Earthly desert?
As the world prepares to celebrate the 40th anniversary of that July day in 1969 when the Apollo 11 mission completed the first manned Moon landing allegedly the doubts live on.
The conspiracy theorists, the lunatics, call them what you like, insist that Armstrong and his fellow astronauts, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins, never got further than a few orbits of the Earth.
They claim what the world was watching as it goggled at its TVs was all a fake, filmed months in advance and broadcast as if it were real and happening live.
The landing. The footprints in the dust. Those phantom figures bunny-hopping around in a barren landscape. They were all part of the scam.
A loopy idea? Consider this:
In 1979, when the first suggestions began to emerge that NASA might have been up to some dirty tricks, six per cent of Americans thought the Moon landing was a hoax. In 1999, the number had risen to 11 per cent.
When they counted again recently, they discovered no fewer than 22 per cent believed that the Apollo 11 Moon landing never happened.
That's more than 60 million suspicious Americans. And many more millions worldwide. The internet now teems with claims and allegations.
[...]
Technology then was positively primitive. The computer developed for the Apollo programme had only a tiny fraction of the power in a home PC today. The satnav that guides your car is many times more sophisticated than the machine which, so we are assured, steered a mission 250,000 miles to a few square yards of the Sea of Tranquility and back.
Even recently, when President George W Bush announced the USA's ambition to return to the Moon, he was told it would take 11 years to put the engineering together.
It's embarrassing now for NASA to realise that, as a four-decade anniversary approaches, a rapidly-growing body of public opinion is convinced the greatest moment was a fake.
At NASA headquarters in Washington, the men in suits even have a code for them. HBs the Hoax Believers.
[...]
Of course, NASA has its photographic proof. Thousands of pictures, in fact. They were taken on Moon missions between 1969 and 1972, showing men and their machines, against a backdrop that had become very familiar to a public growing almost bored with the adventure by the end.
The HBs, though, kept picking over every detail. They began to notice strange tricks of the light.
How, for example, could an astronaut (below) be walking through a shadow, or have the sun at his back, and yet be brightly lit from the front, showing off all those bits of his spacesuit, especially the Stars and Stripes flag, in technicolour?
If you were posing this in a studio, with so-called in-fill lights blazing from every angle, you couldn't have produced a better result. The response from NASA? Well, you have to understand that on the Moon light can behave in odd ways.
There isn't the atmosphere to spread it around like on Earth, but there is an open surface to reflect it where you might least expect it. So where are the stars? In every photo, the sky was ink black, with nothing at all twinkling out there.
Another lunar phenomenon, NASA said. Because the sun was so bright, and the surface so reflective, the stars would be too dim for a camera to capture, or an astronauts eye to register.
It didn't take long, either, before questions were raised about moondust. Just like moonlight, it seemed to have strange properties. An astronauts foot would leave a print, for example. Yet the lunar rover, with an Earthly weight of 10 tons, would not.
And how come, when the spidery landing vehicle hovered above the surface and fired blasts from its retro-jets to lower itself down, it didn't even appear to have disturbed the very ground underneath it.
[...]
But the HBs have begun to gather important allies.
A former engineer who worked on the design of Apollo rockets Bill Kaysing had his doubts during the 1960s about whether the Moon programme would ever get off the ground.
What I saw on TV made me a sceptic, he says. The whole thing seemed phoney to me.
He was particularly puzzled by the landing vehicle itself, which didn't seem to make any engine noise.
Almost as if, Bill points out, it was a prop being lowered by wires on to a movie set.
The chances of getting a man to the Moon and bringing him back again were something like 0.0017 per cent in other words, a virtual impossibility, he adds.
My view is they were told if you cant make it, fake it.
He's not alone in his doubts.
Brian OLeary says: "I can't be sure 100 per cent that man actually walked on the Moon."
Considering Brian was an astronaut in the 1960s, and an adviser during the Apollo programme, that's a bombshell.
[...]
Today only Aldrin, now 78, keeps a high public profile.
He was confronted two years ago by a TV reporter who demanded he swear on the Bible that the landing wasnt a hoax.
Aldrin's response? He punched the guy on the nose and narrowly escaped prosecution. More proof, said the HBs, of the pressure of keeping a 40-year secret.
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Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Were the 'Moon Landings' a Hoax? - 22% of Americans in 2009 say 'yes', double from just 1999
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