That's a disingenuous way of putting it. "Just get on with it and actually go there" implies that the task was straightforward, and that the only feasible reason for a hoax can have been laziness.JavaScriptDonkey wrote:It's a question of which position is more likely to be true.
Did NASA and it staff and contractors conspire to fake the moon landings or did they just get on with it and actually go there?
On the now-disappeared Web sites I read, it was suggested that the big technical problem was not getting machines to the moon, but keeping astronauts alive for weeks in space, particularly given the huge exposure to radiation.
But then how do you explain that odd photo? Just assume you hallucinated it? At work here we see the eternal human tendency to disregard anomalies, as though their being anomalies makes them insignificant. It's like the police interviewing a murder suspect who answers all questions except one with complete credibility, and deciding on the basis of the statistical balance that they'll give him the benefit of the doubt.To me it seems the entire Apollo mission run of early low orbit craft, unmanned moon shots and the eventual landing of 12 astronauts on the surface (including the Apollo 13 nightmare) is a technical marvel and formed the basis of the careers of countless engineers and scientists. To suggest that the USGovt faked it on the basis of an odd photo and that everyone involved was duped seems to me to be a madness.
Just to reiterate - I'm not saying the moon landings were definitely faked, I'm saying that some of the anomalies, at least as I remember them, are so significant that to reject them out of hand seems to me self-deception.
That's what I thought originally. Even at the start, I wasn't convinced that an airliner crashed into the Pentagon. I assumed it was because it had been shot down elsewhere, and the US Govt. didn't want to admit that it had killed the passengers for reasons of national self-defence.On the plus side I do suspect that there might be a small 9/11 conspiracy but only insofar as to cover up incompetence in the White House.
It was only after hearing about Peak Oil, and reading Matt Savinar's suspicions, that I perceived a motive for a much bigger cover-up, and started to look at the conspiracy theories in detail. On reading about the truly magnificent scale and scope and of the apparent incompetence, I found it hard to credit that it wasn't co-ordinated, and I still do. For me, accepting so many spectacular coincidences, and completely illogical behaviour from the top level of US government and security forces, within the space of a couple of hours, involved a far greater suspension of reason and common sense than invoking a conspiracy. Dozens of high calibre officials, who'd managed their critically important duties impeccably for their whole careers, lapsed into irrational decision-making and complete disregard for regularly rehearsed emergency protocols, as though they were subject to some kind of mass brainwashing exercise.