I just can't

Hollatchaboy

Well-Known Member
Step 1







Devise a practical, reproducible experiment that will clearly demonstrate that the earth is flat, by way of predictable assertion, and testable results.















Step 2







Carry out your experiment, and record your result data.















Step 3







Publish your data along with your clear logical interpretation of said data, to back up your assertion, for review by your peers. (sic)















Note







Tin foil hat not required.
this one gets a thumb up and a laughing emoji for the last sentence.
 

Drop That Sound

Well-Known Member
That's a reasonable explanation.
You don't see stars during the day on earth, even though they're still there in the sky. And in all those pics taken from the moon, the moon's surface is lit up, so it's "daytime," i.e. the sun is shining on it.

There's no atmosphere on the moon, though, so the sky looks black, but just like on earth, it's way too bright for a camera to show both the stars and the sunlit ground at the same time. When you turn the exposure down far enough to see the ground and the earth in the background clearly, the stars disappear from the image. If someone took pics from the far side of the moon, maybe then you could see stars in the sky.

Either way, if the pictures from the moon and space were fake, it would seem really silly to just forget to put in any stars at all, right?
You also don't see the moon all that well during the day here on earth, even though it is there some of the time. So why is it, that if the camera exposure can't pick up the stars during the day from the lunar surface, is it able to show the earth floating in the sky perfectly? Why doesn't it appear to fade out, like the moon does during the day here?
 

Drop That Sound

Well-Known Member
You want receipts? Fine, i'll get receipts. I go to the beach all the time anyway. I just need maybe 2 more telescopes, and can hold the camera up to them. You guys will just say i'm cheating anyway.. :lol:
 

Drop That Sound

Well-Known Member
If the lunar surface is so bright, that it can't focus on the stars, how the heck does it even see the earth rise at all? Why isn't everything pitch black? How does it focus on the moon and the earth so well at the same time?
 

waterproof808

Well-Known Member
They will never show any stars because it was all staged, and they knew people would be able to determine it was faked by their positions, especially if they put them in back then. Going all black was a well thought out decision, with no going back on it. Their fake stars would never match up perfectly, and they didn't have as advanced of cgi yet to pull it off. They have to stick to the same reasons they used 50-60 years ago, even today when they could render it so easy... So, Never a straight answer..

NM the camera's not being able to see the stars.. Some of the astronauts say they seen them, and some didn't. Some had to be reminded about it. The only stars ever seen were from the guy buzz tried to knock out if you ask me, haha..

For some reason they only went during the day on every mission ever, and always work on the bright side of anything in orbit, which sounds bogus to me.

They claim to see the stars if they stand in a shadow on the lunar surface, so how is it the camera somehow never got behind something, or shadowed out for even a second, showing glimpses of stars?

Not even once, ever? BS!
Who is "They?"
 

Drop That Sound

Well-Known Member
"The Texas scientists also found that another change in mass may have started in late 2002, which coincides with the moderate El Nino that developed at that time. But the cause of an earlier variation in the Earth’s mass over the 21-year period between 1978 and 2001, however, still remains a mystery."
 

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
have you ever noticed that there is more powrful hurricans in the pacific than the atlantic? that because of La Nino, when that stops which is prolly be next year, then we in the SW will have more of a rainy season than a dry......we want La Nina to happen

and those pic of the moon, yes those are right simply cause no one had an idea of where to land so they made topicgraphical maps and then remade them here to pick out landing spots....
 

Hollatchaboy

Well-Known Member
You also don't see the moon all that well during the day here on earth, even though it is there some of the time. So why is it, that if the camera exposure can't pick up the stars during the day from the lunar surface, is it able to show the earth floating in the sky perfectly? Why doesn't it appear to fade out, like the moon does during the day here?
some days I can still see the moon during the day, but not stars, so why couldn't you be able to see the earth from the moon during "daytime"?
 
Top