Entertainment has an obsession with the theme of space. Shows for kids often depict cartoons taking a ride to the moon. By the time we are young adults, we are entranced by the possibility of planets far, far away and futurist technologies in Star Wars. But let’s leave Hollywood aside for a moment and look at some real-world space travel.
Man First Lands on the Moon
On July 20, 1969, NASA astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin are said to have flown to the moon in the Apollo 11 space mission under President Richard Nixon.
Neil Armstrong is said to be the first man to walk on the moon. That historic day was shown to the American people in a live broadcast. In his now-famous quote, Armstrong proclaimed, “One small step for man. One giant leap for mankind.”
Second came Buzz Aldrin who left the space vessel to supposedly be the next man to step foot on the moon. It begs a question though. If Neil Armstrong was the first man on the moon while Buzz Aldrin was waiting in the capsule, then who was the cameraman already outside the spacecraft filming Armstrong’?
More Moon Trips
NASA proceeded to send astronauts to the moon another six times between 1969 and 1972.
No More Moon Trips
NASA has not returned to the moon since because their official story is they lost the telemetry data. There was no big news story around. No big investigation. No one was fired. Keep in mind, that data wasn’t stored on minuscule micro- or nano-chips like it can be today. Back in the 1960s and 1970s computer data was stored on reels that would have filled an entire room. But NASA lost it all, so that’s why there hasn’t been another trip to the moon.
There is one more reason NASA scientists haven’t sent anyone flying into space. They discovered the Van Allen radiation belt. It is said to be an impenetrable field of radiation that no human can safely pass through, even with current technology.
Watch the Greg Reese Report
To uncover further contradictions around the US moon landings, grab a bowl of popcorn, get cozy on the couch, and pull in your friends and family to watch the Greg Reese Report on the US moon landings: