Artemis launch

/ Artemis launch #61  
Or aliens provided the moon pics and NASA the recovery? lol
 
/ Artemis launch #62  
After we build our base on the moon, it’ll be fun to see the moon landing conspiracy theorists roll out their conspiracies that it’s all faked.
 
/ Artemis launch #63  
Would they really make up all of the setbacks if NASA was faking the moon launches?
 
/ Artemis launch #64  
Anyone wonder what they were doing for that 45 unsupervised minutes while on the far side of the moon?

IMG_3302.jpeg
 
/ Artemis launch #67  
After we build our base on the moon, it’ll be fun to see the moon landing conspiracy theorists roll out their conspiracies that it’s all faked.
Even if this could happen it would be a total waste of money. Money that would be better spent fixing the cesspool that has existed in this country for many years.

I'm really suprised that people still believe that 1960's technology landed men on the moon 7 times.
 
/ Artemis launch #68  
Even if this could happen it would be a total waste of money. Money that would be better spent fixing the cesspool that has existed in this country for many years.

I'm really suprised that people still believe that 1960's technology landed men on the moon 7 times.
I love folks who are trolling with their conspiracy theories. ❤️
 
/ Artemis launch #69  
I told the wife they need to take out a page from Starlink.

They put cameras on everything and anything.

Ditto!!

And the "narrator" who is calling the play-by-play for Starlink is very clear and explains everything as it happens.

This was great to watch, but the coverage reminded me of watching a ball game with the commentators / color-men talking about trivia and distracting instead of letting us focus on the event.
 
/ Artemis launch #71  
i watched the launch from the beach in Ormond. Pretty incredible thing to see. Can't even imagine the feeling the astronauts had on board.
We got to watch a shuttle launch many years ago from about 3-4 miles away. Pretty awesome!!! You see the smoke and flames but it takes 15-20 seconds before the sound hits you then man! Ground shakes. Your chest shakes. You look around and thousands of people all have the same expression as they watch. Amazing stuff. (y)
 
/ Artemis launch #73  
I was lucky to live in Florida, or visiting relatives who lived in Florida, when NASA was at it's prime. I remember one of the Apollo launches when I was in school and the teacher wheeled a TV into the room so we could watch. Another time, my mom and I were driving in central Florida, through miles and miles of citrus groves that no longer exist, when one of the Apollo's launched. We were listening on the radio and saw rocket as clear as day. It was huge, even though it had to have been at least 60-70 miles away.

One year, we went to see a Shuttle launch, but it was canceled.

When I lived in South Florida you could see launches if the weather was clear.

One cold day, I was driving north to work on I95 and saw the shuttle launch. It was going up just fine and then it looked odd. Not good. Go to work and we happened to have a TV. I saw Challenger blow up. :(
 
/ Artemis launch #75  
We got to watch a shuttle launch many years ago from about 3-4 miles away. Pretty awesome!!! You see the smoke and flames but it takes 15-20 seconds before the sound hits you then man! Ground shakes. Your chest shakes. You look around and thousands of people all have the same expression as they watch. Amazing stuff. (y)
2 years ago we watched a few launches from Titusville which is right up the road from Cape Canaveral .. it really is awesome to see.
 
/ Artemis launch #76  
So funny story.... we saw the shuttle launch and took a bunch of photos. Then we visited the space center IMAX show, and I took a bunch of photos of the screen showing a shuttle landing.

Got home and had the photos developed and showed my dad, not telling him the landings were on an IMAX screen.

He had a puzzled look on his face and asked how long we were down there and what lens I used for the landing. :ROFLMAO: I fessed up. He got a good laugh out of it.
 
/ Artemis launch #78  

"If you find yourself in a debate questioning whether humankind first stepped on the Moon on 20 July 1969 the chances are that you are woefully underprepared," the Institute of Physics website says.
"Most people take it as gospel that the U.S. government, NASA, the 12 astronauts in total who have walked on the Moon and the 400,000 people involved in the Apollo program would have neither the will nor the way to fake one of humanity’s greatest ever achievements."
If you're looking for physical evidence of a moon landing, though, there are more than 8,000 publicly available photos, thousands of hours of video footage, transcripts and audio recordings of all air-to-ground conversations and more than 380 kilograms of moon rock that the Apollo astronauts brought back to Earth.
 
/ Artemis launch #79  

"If you find yourself in a debate questioning whether humankind first stepped on the Moon on 20 July 1969 the chances are that you are woefully underprepared," the Institute of Physics website says.
"Most people take it as gospel that the U.S. government, NASA, the 12 astronauts in total who have walked on the Moon and the 400,000 people involved in the Apollo program would have neither the will nor the way to fake one of humanity’s greatest ever achievements."
If you're looking for physical evidence of a moon landing, though, there are more than 8,000 publicly available photos, thousands of hours of video footage, transcripts and audio recordings of all air-to-ground conversations and more than 380 kilograms of moon rock that the Apollo astronauts brought back to Earth.
Everybody knows that was actually filmed in the deserts of New Mexico. My friend's father's coworker's ex-wife's cousin operated the camera.
 
 
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