Friday, July 15, 2011

VIDEO: Faking the NASA Moon Landing

Top Secret NASA footage of the making of fake Moon landing
WARNING: Gratuitous use of profanity by astronaut-actors angry at faking it.

First of all, the USSR has been to the Moon and the USA has too. By now China, India, the Europeans collectively have all at least circled and photographed it. Why then was the footage the world was show faked?

The faking was done on a Hollywood-style soundstage. This has long been known: There were many small mistakes as NASA rushed to prove we had conquered the lunar surface -- a flag fluttering in the wind of an atmosphere-free sphere, lack of propulsion jets, no indentation in the moondust where jet exhaust would have brought the vehicle to a soft landing, and so on.

The reason for the fake is much more shocking than the fact that there was a fake, as this leaked video seems to establish. Although this footage was shot and shown to the world, we did make it to the Moon.

(MUFON)

What we found were dilapidated structures, advanced mining efforts, extraterrestrials in massive craft, water, glass pyramids, and a you're-not-welcome mat that sent us off the unnatural satellite and kept us off ever since.

Perhaps there has been a green light since because we have bombed (crashed objects on) its surface, imaged the dark or far side, and fathomed its hollow nature. Of course, unfortunately, we are bent on militarizing it much as Hitler intended to do.

All of this might be dismissed out of hand if it were not for the persistent efforts of Richard C. Hoagland (enterprisemission.com), Dr. Stephen Greer (disclosureproject.org), and a growing parade of defecting military and government personnel at the National Press Club. Obama and Clinton know, having been briefed by Dr. Greer, but it is not within their power to do anything about it in terms of disclosure.

NASA shows a new map of the far side of the Moon
NASA showed on Monday the most complete picture of the far side of the moon. The picture was made thanks to the data transmitted by the probe Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter.