| Subject: Re: Who took the pictures of Neil Armstrong's first steps on the Moon ? |
| From: "N:dlzc D:aol T:com \(dlzc\)" <N: dlzc1 D:cox T:net@nospam.com> |
| Date: 22/01/2005, 02:09 |
| Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy,alt.conspiracy.area51,alt.parenting.solutions,alt.sci.physics,talk.politics.space |
Dear Tommy:
"Tommy" <nospam@nospam.com> wrote in message
news:9297325.gfDJvZQEx4@FreeBSD...
N:dlzc D:aol T:com (dlzc) wrote:
Dear Tommy:
"Tommy" <nospam@nospam.com> wrote in message
news:1587769.EMYjPiDykr@FreeBSD...
israel t wrote:
"Sport Pilot" <hppilot001@cs.com> writes:
Dude, the flag was actually hanging from a thick wire at the top, the
wire was attached to the pole at a right angle. If you wiggle the
flat
it would appear to wave. They explained that when they were "waving"
the flags after they landed. You belive Walter Crankcase, bit lib
reporter till 1980 don't you?
The wind made it wave.
There is no wind on the moon..!
I would like to know how they got through the Van Allen Belts without
dieing
of radiation poison.
Hormesis. Dental x-rays don't kill you either, how do you survive
those.
As for the pictures of Armstrong, they claim that there was an outside
camera that filemed this event. What kind of camera and film could
withstand the radiation of the VA Belts...?
Any of it could. Remember the nice x-ray machine at the airport.
Are you comparing the radiation from mere x-ray machines to that of the
VA-Belts? Uhhhhhhh, Ok. <snicker>
Yes. The Van Allen belts are only Earth's magnetic field. The rest is
powered by the solar wind. The same stuff that has buffeted every
satellite that has travelled to Venus, Mars, and outwards. How many of
those have been fried by radiation? None. Even when we didn't know how to
do proper shielding, none were lost.
Try not to be ignorant, by peddling someone else's crap.
David A. Smith