Why is it so hard to return to the moon?

Ғылым және технология

Full podcast episodes: www.askaspaceman.com
Support: / pmsutter
Follow: / paulmattsutter and / paulmattsutter
If we went to the Moon already, why can’t we go back so easily? What technology have we lost? What are we trying to do differently? I discuss these questions and more in today’s Ask a Spaceman!
Follow all the show updates at www.askaspaceman.com, and help support the show at / pmsutter !
Keep those questions about space, science, astronomy, astrophysics, and cosmology coming to #AskASpaceman for COMPLETE KNOWLEDGE OF TIME AND SPACE!

Пікірлер: 4 700

  • @jimchirdon432
    @jimchirdon43224 күн бұрын

    With modern technology it should be easier not harder

  • @martinattwood7801

    @martinattwood7801

    22 күн бұрын

    Yes of course . They couldn't go in 60s or since then . 😊

  • @marksprague1280

    @marksprague1280

    20 күн бұрын

    The hard part is prying the funding out of Congress. They'd rather pay to house all these newly-arrived Democrat voters in hotels than fund science.

  • @rawmilkmike

    @rawmilkmike

    19 күн бұрын

    @@marksprague1280 You can't cut taxes and increase the budget.

  • @rawmilkmike

    @rawmilkmike

    19 күн бұрын

    @marksprague1280 The space race and the Cold War were both imaginary money pits. Because they were imaginary, the government was able to cut taxes for the rich. Space telescopes and landing on asteroids and comets, that's real science. You should be happy that we do any science.

  • @marksprague1280

    @marksprague1280

    19 күн бұрын

    @@rawmilkmike When has of the KluKKer party ever actually cut taxes?

  • @maxpayne2337
    @maxpayne233725 күн бұрын

    When you bought a car in the 60's. Your owner manual gave instructions on how to adjust your valve lash. Today, your manual warns against drinking the antifreeze. Society has become "stupidy".

  • @steverich136

    @steverich136

    25 күн бұрын

    This

  • @homerwhite4633

    @homerwhite4633

    25 күн бұрын

    It’s by design. It’s a lot easier to control scared and stupid people.

  • @johnlaughlin266

    @johnlaughlin266

    25 күн бұрын

    Read any current issue of Scientific American and compare them to articles written in the 1940’s: analytical, comprehensive, efficient is expressing complex concepts. Even the ads back then make you realize they were operating on a much higher plain and not treating the reader like a child with zero attention span. Although, that last part should be especially earmarked to the American news/entertainment infintalization complex.

  • @vagabondroller

    @vagabondroller

    25 күн бұрын

    Operating on a higher plane. I know. I went to public school as well.

  • @imconsequetau5275

    @imconsequetau5275

    25 күн бұрын

    ​@@johnlaughlin266 Infantilization, yes.

  • @brettrun8575
    @brettrun857510 күн бұрын

    Pretty impressive that you can take less than five minutes worth of talking points and stretch it out for over 30 minutes.

  • @fannyalbi9040

    @fannyalbi9040

    7 күн бұрын

    😂😂😂

  • @jdobbs7700

    @jdobbs7700

    6 күн бұрын

    The essence of academia! The worst of the academic approach is pedantics.

  • @mark24358

    @mark24358

    5 күн бұрын

    Holy crap I was just thinking the same thing.

  • @user-vp6vf8wm2s

    @user-vp6vf8wm2s

    3 күн бұрын

    Good job

  • @ehabshawi6666

    @ehabshawi6666

    Күн бұрын

    Specialy when the idea doesn't make sense. 😂

  • @beemrmem3
    @beemrmem312 күн бұрын

    Imagine we spent 800billion on space exploration instead of war...

  • @DrewDaGod-vt6zr

    @DrewDaGod-vt6zr

    5 күн бұрын

    If Muslims were in space trust me they would find the money

  • @anonamatron

    @anonamatron

    5 күн бұрын

    ​@@DrewDaGod-vt6zrthe other side of that conflict are the ones sucking away all the money

  • @MrMirville

    @MrMirville

    5 күн бұрын

    Space exploration is part of war : the real aim of Apollo was a step further to install mass surveillance from space.

  • @Ailsworth

    @Ailsworth

    4 күн бұрын

    @@DrewDaGod-vt6zr that can be safely bet upon -no M will ever walk on the moon, unless he was carried there, bodily, by a C.

  • @user-hg3vu3uc6g

    @user-hg3vu3uc6g

    3 күн бұрын

    You pay 1 Trillion dollars every 90 days on the interest on the national debt!

  • @vettman63
    @vettman6326 күн бұрын

    Thank you for not using AI generated narration like so many channels have defaulted to.

  • @randuthayne

    @randuthayne

    25 күн бұрын

    funny they have AI narrate videos now, but cant go back to the moon because "it's too expensive" even though they spend way more on funding wars in ukraine and Israel

  • @pasonveronica2370

    @pasonveronica2370

    24 күн бұрын

    @@randuthaynelol would you go back to where there no treasures? Only lunar rocks 😂

  • @ronaldgreene5733

    @ronaldgreene5733

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@pasonveronica2370 . . if you can show up the first time without being caught spreading petrified wood afterward as the genuine article . . Interesting that recent returns from the Chinese unmanned lunar mission contained rocks having an entirely different ratio of minerals not remotely matching any of the material from Apollo missions . . No 60 minutes quest is forthcoming however -- let alone network news coverage in fake journalistic enterprise beyond celebrity gossip.

  • @jaegerolfa

    @jaegerolfa

    24 күн бұрын

    @@pasonveronica2370only reason we really need to go back is for the alleged abundance of helium-3 which would make a more efficient fuel for further exploration and possibly manned missions to the outer worlds.

  • @dh2032

    @dh2032

    24 күн бұрын

    @@randuthayne the bit, explanes the fir go at anything, it unknown, some times you nee to actuly build tooling needed to, to even make the machine you want to make, NASA it's self, big tool needed for task,, well doing, it second or third time? almost everything, from the first go? so costs sould go down, second third fourth, and soon on,

  • @austinlumpkins1955
    @austinlumpkins195524 күн бұрын

    That’s ludicrous that we couldn’t rebuild a Saturn V rocket today, I do not believe that for a second. The other idea that we lost some of the technology we used is also preposterous.

  • @austinlumpkins1955

    @austinlumpkins1955

    24 күн бұрын

    Oh and also we as a government couldn’t blow Elon Musk if we built our own rockets.

  • @KornPop96

    @KornPop96

    11 күн бұрын

    Why would we want to build terribly outdated rockets? That's like asking why we don't mass produce Ford Model Ts anymore. 😂😂😂

  • @edwardhalpin7503

    @edwardhalpin7503

    11 күн бұрын

    Not ar all ludicrous! I retired from an industry which peaked in the 80s. It was clear specialization and continuation of expertize were declining in various systems/techbolgy in the following decades

  • @stuartgray5877

    @stuartgray5877

    11 күн бұрын

    ​@@austinlumpkins1955we did not "lose the tech" we lost the INFRASTRUCTURE. We cannot build cathode ray tube televisions in the US either. Does that mean we "lost" the tech? No.

  • @michaels4255

    @michaels4255

    11 күн бұрын

    They were told to destroy the blueprints for the Saturn V. One NASA employee smuggled one of the blueprints home as a souvenir, but reported that a week or two later (I have forgotten the exact length of time he said) a couple of federal agents showed up at his front door and demanded he hand over his pilfered blueprint. He didn't know how they knew, but they figured it out somehow. It was old technology, not a national security risk. Why were they so anxious to destroy the plans? The obvious deduction: it was evidence. Evidence of something they wanted to hide forever. This is but one of many pieces of evidence that point to this conclusion. On the positive side, if it is this hard just to get to the moon, we probably don't have to worry about space aliens.

  • @Savagetechie
    @Savagetechie20 күн бұрын

    13.3% of the federal budget goes to the military, 12.7% to education, 0.3% to Nasa.

  • @billblake5177

    @billblake5177

    5 күн бұрын

    And social programs? Servicing the debt costs more than our military right now.

  • @Savagetechie

    @Savagetechie

    5 күн бұрын

    @@billblake5177 the fact that your military gets more funding than education and health care is stupid. Defund it, if it was lowered by even 1% it would be a huge boost for social programs, if I was American I'd want it cut by 5% with that 5% going into heath and education.

  • @robertlee6338

    @robertlee6338

    4 күн бұрын

    Even 0.3% is a huge waste

  • @Savagetechie

    @Savagetechie

    4 күн бұрын

    Nasa JPL have some pretty significant inventions which are in daily use all over the world. From Anti-corrosion coatings to camera sensors. Definitely worth gathering some refrenece material before claiming that 0.3% is a huge waste... Now the US DOD they like to waste money including a standby airline and the ARFC... I know where I'd rather my tax money went.

  • @GgfgHhk

    @GgfgHhk

    3 күн бұрын

    That's enough for Hollywood

  • @MrBob1984
    @MrBob19846 күн бұрын

    At this rate its more likely we invent time travel and go back to the 60's to beg for the technology to go to the moon

  • @shellygardner6410
    @shellygardner641026 күн бұрын

    "I like money" Proof that the movie "Idiocracy" is a documentary

  • @Ezekiel903

    @Ezekiel903

    25 күн бұрын

    we miss Stanley Kubrik!

  • @soofunchong3942

    @soofunchong3942

    25 күн бұрын

    ​@@Ezekiel903he made it look so easy

  • @TopperPenquin

    @TopperPenquin

    25 күн бұрын

    Stanley Kubrick...🤔 I wondered myself if that Women have their grubby Spider Fingers in our Pie?

  • @TopperPenquin

    @TopperPenquin

    25 күн бұрын

    I mean I cannot even make the Short Symbol of a Spider.

  • @galenicalhoover6508

    @galenicalhoover6508

    24 күн бұрын

    Me too.

  • @felixthefearless1886
    @felixthefearless188627 күн бұрын

    Interesting that it could be done in the 1960’s with one launch, but now we need 20… very interesting. Anyone believe this?

  • @kenp1677

    @kenp1677

    26 күн бұрын

    Yes. In fact multiple launch scenarios were considered during the design phase of the 1960's lunar mission development including a number of varying types of multi launch plans. In that same spirit there were ideas to mount the command module to a lander base and take all the hardware to the surface. Many designs and plans were considered.

  • @kbotah2023

    @kbotah2023

    26 күн бұрын

    IT NEVER HAPPENED Have you ever seen the documentary A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE MOON? Or ASTRONAUTS GONE WILD?

  • @nighthawk0077

    @nighthawk0077

    26 күн бұрын

    ​@@kbotah2023pseudo science that has been debunked long ago

  • @scottsound4711

    @scottsound4711

    26 күн бұрын

    @@kbotah2023 IT DID HAPPENED Have you ever seen the documentary A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE MOON DEBUNK ?

  • @trj1442

    @trj1442

    26 күн бұрын

    I still can't believe smart people think they landed humans 6 times on the moon with less than the technology of a first generation Nokia phone and here we are in 2024 and they can't even land a robot on the moon without it falling over. It just amazes me that people still believe we went to the moon back in the 1960's and 1970's and even took rover buggies with them. Who in their right mind would believe that shlt these days.

  • @notsparks
    @notsparks15 күн бұрын

    Boeing is the primary SLS contractor so I'm going to bet on odds of the door flying off mid flight and the project being grounded for years.

  • @coisasnatv
    @coisasnatv25 күн бұрын

    Forgot to mention NASA also "lost" about *14.000* tapes with telemetry data from the Apollo project, vanish, gone.

  • @Samuelfish2k

    @Samuelfish2k

    24 күн бұрын

    Wouldn’t want anyone these days to prove they actually faked it, so you know, lose that important data asap.

  • @oojimmyflip

    @oojimmyflip

    24 күн бұрын

    @@Samuelfish2k its bit like unrelated buildings collapsing on 9-11 full of computers and paperwork. Its a sad fact of life that Goverments lie to us every single day.

  • @recoilrob324

    @recoilrob324

    24 күн бұрын

    @@Samuelfish2k If you actually think they 'faked' it....I challenge you to go to Florida and look at the Saturn V they have laying on its' side and tell me it's not real. And often times there will be people there who worked on the Apollo project who will be happy to answer any questions you might have. But you won't do that because you'd rather live with your delusions than find out the truth. If you actually look...you can find blueprints, specifications, test procedures and results from every single part in that spacecraft....of which there are millions. All faked...of course. Once you see the mountain of documentation it should start to dawn on you that it was real.

  • @TheSteveSteele

    @TheSteveSteele

    24 күн бұрын

    @@Samuelfish2kThey lost the telemetry tapes for ONE mission only. You can find the Apollo 15 telemetry data online. So, that’s a very poor excuse.

  • @Samuelfish2k

    @Samuelfish2k

    24 күн бұрын

    @@TheSteveSteele they lost them all.

  • @cwb0110
    @cwb011025 күн бұрын

    So Ukraine receives the entire Artimus budget every quarter? Yeah! Makes sense

  • @randuthayne

    @randuthayne

    25 күн бұрын

    I made a similar comment yesterday, came back to see responses to my post and found my post had been deleted. :O

  • @indianastan

    @indianastan

    25 күн бұрын

    We had Vietnam war going on ?

  • @grgmetube

    @grgmetube

    25 күн бұрын

    @@indianastan Yes if something has a political motivation there is plenty of money but science or long term human interest does not

  • @TheBuckeye

    @TheBuckeye

    24 күн бұрын

    Sickening. Isn't it??

  • @PeckerwoodIndustries

    @PeckerwoodIndustries

    24 күн бұрын

    Ukraine is a pressing issue of the future world our children inherit. Will it be a world based in logical rule of law, or a world in which it is ok to murder people just to steal their shit. Authoritarian governments are the default animal state but reflect all of mans failings whereas democracy represents a higher ideal which is very hard to hold together always in jeopardy of the tyranny of the many, or the tyranny of the few. Hold foremost in your heart the better angels of your human nature for the sake of our collective future, and be willing to defend them when they are under direct violent assault or we shall perish and enslaved, and miserable species.

  • @FrankMakesMovies
    @FrankMakesMovies10 күн бұрын

    One possibility is that we never actually went there in the first place. Or maybe it's just that tragic loss of all that data that is such a "painful process" to get back.

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    9 күн бұрын

    What a mish-mash of quote mined nonsense. Precisely what "data" are you referring to?

  • @ivan_viturruma

    @ivan_viturruma

    8 сағат бұрын

    @@yassassin6425 Never happened. 1 time might have been easier to believe with better fakes, but they couldn't leave it at that, and that constant tripping just became a big expensive joke.

  • @steveurkel1487
    @steveurkel14878 күн бұрын

    $300 billion moon landing budget 1960s politicians: "Let's not and say we did"

  • @markdavid7013
    @markdavid701327 күн бұрын

    If we as a species didn't spend so much money and effort on ways to destroy ourselves..maybe we could accomplish this and a lot more. 🤔

  • @unarmored9973

    @unarmored9973

    26 күн бұрын

    That's arguable, I mean we are talking about one of the greatest achievements in history motivated by one of the greatest superpower schlong measuring contests in human existence.

  • @MisterHowzat

    @MisterHowzat

    26 күн бұрын

    There are many ways of destroying ourselves. The cost of preventing that from happening costs even more, and going back to the moon is one way of preventing our self destruction.

  • @philofthefuture1570

    @philofthefuture1570

    26 күн бұрын

    Ironically, we ride to space on technology developed originally to kill people, but yeah, I'm with you.😊

  • @stevenswitzer5154

    @stevenswitzer5154

    26 күн бұрын

    To be fair. Without war we would likely not have rockets...

  • @thebigpicture2032

    @thebigpicture2032

    25 күн бұрын

    Considering that military spending is 800+ billion and that went to NASA instead, then yes we would be on Mars in no time.

  • @J.C.Ky.ridgerunner1955
    @J.C.Ky.ridgerunner195524 күн бұрын

    you can't return to a place you've never been

  • @nathanamos8325

    @nathanamos8325

    17 күн бұрын

    😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @lesliegriffiths8567

    @lesliegriffiths8567

    16 күн бұрын

    In your case, a library.

  • @festivalflightcrew2895

    @festivalflightcrew2895

    16 күн бұрын

    How high do you have to be to believe this?

  • @kickpuncher1892

    @kickpuncher1892

    16 күн бұрын

    Haha earth is flat too huh?

  • @clintonbuss2247

    @clintonbuss2247

    16 күн бұрын

    ​@@festivalflightcrew2895 you don't have to be high at all to believe the governments lies just look to 2020 the entire world was lied to and everyone walked around with diapers on their face. You should get high on some form of plant and do some deep thinking. NASA lost all the technology and data on what was supposedly mankind's greatest achievement be a good thought to dwell on

  • @Brand-ju4jm
    @Brand-ju4jm14 күн бұрын

    It is hard to do again something that was never done originally

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    14 күн бұрын

    It was though, nine times and six landings. Going to the moon will always be technically challenging.

  • @paulsultana8683

    @paulsultana8683

    Күн бұрын

    @@yassassin6425lmao yea it was a good movie 😂

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    20 сағат бұрын

    @@paulsultana8683 A good movie? Nine crewed missions to the moon? You're really not all that bright are you?

  • @paulsultana8683

    @paulsultana8683

    19 сағат бұрын

    @@yassassin6425 lol says the Gullible 🤡

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    18 сағат бұрын

    @@paulsultana8683 Gullible? Ok then, to clarify, you think that the hundreds of hours of footage from the moon landings was a "movie"? Ok then. Where was the studio? I'd be fascinated to know.

  • @corylee2966
    @corylee296611 күн бұрын

    We have to get there for the first time before we can get there a second.

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    10 күн бұрын

    NASA sent nine crewed missions to the moon with six landings. It would have been more had it not been for the premature cancellation of the Apollo Programme and the aborted Apollo 13 mission. Presumably NASA also felt the need to inexplicably fake their own failure?

  • @SteveT-0

    @SteveT-0

    15 сағат бұрын

    India had a satellite orbit the moon several years ago and took images of two of the Apollo landing sites (15 and 17 I believe). I suggest you use your favourite search engine and look at these images, that would change your mind.

  • @ivan_viturruma

    @ivan_viturruma

    8 сағат бұрын

    @@yassassin6425 Never happened. 1 time might have been easier to believe with better fakes, but they couldn't leave it at that, and that constant tripping just became a big expensive joke.

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    8 сағат бұрын

    @@ivan_viturruma There are occasions, even by the imbecilic standards of conspiracy believers predating the comments section of You Tube that someone floats a notion so ludicrous, or submits something that is so transcendently stupid that one is perplexed by the sheer variety of overwhelming valid counterpoints that simultaneously present themselves. In such times you find yourself left to suffocate in the overwhelming paralysis of indecisive bewilderment, like a rabbit caught in a car's headlight, which suffers for its immobility when any action would be preferable to none.

  • @vidtech2630
    @vidtech263024 күн бұрын

    Actually a Funny thing happened going to the moon , the funny thing happened in low orbit.

  • @KornPop96

    @KornPop96

    11 күн бұрын

    You mean that horribly inaccurate conspiracy theory fan fiction? It's complete nonsense. Every second of it

  • @vidtech2630

    @vidtech2630

    11 күн бұрын

    @KornPop96 you know what ? Today I've seen a submarine that sank to the top of the sky .it's been on the news all day !

  • @KornPop96

    @KornPop96

    11 күн бұрын

    @@vidtech2630 I don't even know what that's supposed to mean. 😂

  • @vidtech2630

    @vidtech2630

    11 күн бұрын

    @@KornPop96 correct

  • @michaels4255

    @michaels4255

    11 күн бұрын

    @@KornPop96 It's on video tape guy. And way before photoshop. Even if you still believe -in Santa Claus- that the moon walks were real events, there is still no way the documentation isn't totally faked. Even the best, officially released footage, once you know what to look for, you can see it's a fraud.

  • @NextWorldVR
    @NextWorldVR24 күн бұрын

    10-20 Launches just to fuel the thing,. And they expect us to believe we did that 55 years ago in one launch?

  • @Zorro33313

    @Zorro33313

    24 күн бұрын

    Exactly. And then 13000 boxes with all the "moon missions" original recordings were put into a trash can by some janitor lady. So unlucky!

  • @TheSteveSteele

    @TheSteveSteele

    24 күн бұрын

    @@Zorro33313It wasn’t all the moon missions. You’re making stuff up. I bet you can’t even articulate what was lost and what wasn’t.

  • @Zorro33313

    @Zorro33313

    24 күн бұрын

    @@TheSteveSteele yeye sure. photos are good (well, not exactly good since they've got moon color wrong lol). all the videos, sensor data etc - lost.

  • @MrAlbertaSurfer

    @MrAlbertaSurfer

    21 күн бұрын

    10 to 20 launches to refuel Starship, which is much, much larger than the Apollo craft that went to the moon the first time. This stuff is only confusing to you because you want it to be. Your ignorance is intentional...

  • @TheSteveSteele

    @TheSteveSteele

    21 күн бұрын

    @@Zorro33313 All of the Apollo missions telemetry data and tapes exist. Apollo 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, and 17. All of the telemetry data exists except for some of Apollo 11 telemetry data is missing. Search NSSDCA Master Catalog Search. “These data were extracted 'as read' from 7-track ALSEP ARCSAV (TELEMETRY) tapes that were recovered from the Washington National Records Center (WNRC) in 2010 [1]. Each tape contains 24-hour, time-edited, raw data (not decommutated) from instruments for the ALSEP station deployed near the Apollo 12 landing site. The NASA Johnson Space Center recorded approximately 5000 ALSEP ARCSAV tapes from April 1973 to February 1975 for Apollo 12, 14, 15, 16, and 17 but so far only 439 of them containing data from April through June 1975 have been found at the WNRC [2].”

  • @CookingSkills-zv6bw
    @CookingSkills-zv6bw8 күн бұрын

    As much as we get advanced, we realise its impossible...

  • @user-iu4wh1zs6t

    @user-iu4wh1zs6t

    5 күн бұрын

    Is English your primary language?

  • @dannyhendy

    @dannyhendy

    3 күн бұрын

    ​@@user-iu4wh1zs6t clearly someone with common sense in any case.

  • @starpartyguy5605
    @starpartyguy56056 күн бұрын

    When I was growing up in the 60’s and 70’s, we knew the names of every astronaut, especially the Mercury 7. They used to preempt programs for launches and moonwalks. There’s no outreach or advertising. No wonder why people don’t have any interest in the space program anymore.

  • @phillipdyson2689
    @phillipdyson268925 күн бұрын

    Stanley Kubrick died is the real reason.

  • @charleswest6372

    @charleswest6372

    25 күн бұрын

    You bet. 😊

  • @jimc9581

    @jimc9581

    25 күн бұрын

    He did make a good movie.

  • @shellygardner6410

    @shellygardner6410

    25 күн бұрын

    Google fact check says that we succeeded, so you know its 100% propaganda.

  • @jamesnaile3661

    @jamesnaile3661

    25 күн бұрын

    Really? Kubrick insisted on doing the shooting on location!

  • @kareemsalessi

    @kareemsalessi

    25 күн бұрын

    AVATAR's makers have been taking NASA way beyond the moon.

  • @joabmagara2162
    @joabmagara216226 күн бұрын

    We can keep dithering but it's going to hurt when the Chinese get to the moon ahead of Artemis.

  • @MrAlbertaSurfer

    @MrAlbertaSurfer

    21 күн бұрын

    It's only harder because they're doing it with 2.5% of the budget they used to go the first time. NASA doesn't build anything, it's all government contracts. Hard to get things built when you can't afford to pay anybody but the lowest bidder. This is why SLS is derivative of the shuttle rocket and Orion is a jazzed up Apollo era capsule.

  • @martinmurphy9679

    @martinmurphy9679

    21 күн бұрын

    Why?

  • @Maraguzzi

    @Maraguzzi

    19 күн бұрын

    We’ve never been before 😂😂

  • @jeremyd1869

    @jeremyd1869

    18 күн бұрын

    Except that we already beat them to the moon...in 1969.

  • @wuhanjinjian4973

    @wuhanjinjian4973

    16 күн бұрын

    ChangE project has been doing almost all experiments for mankind moon landing since 2013 while Artemis doing almost nothing so far.

  • @ejaydc8198
    @ejaydc819817 күн бұрын

    "Space maybe the final frontier but its made in a hollywood basement" - Californication RHCP

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    16 күн бұрын

    So Anthony Kiedis said so. What's your point? Are you that dim that you can't even understand a metaphor by the Red Hot Chili Peppers?

  • @aljawisa

    @aljawisa

    13 күн бұрын

    You know NASA itself is the origin of such a theory. It was all about destroying interest in this place that contains high tech remnants of an ancient society. Brookings Report/Invention Secrecy Act of 1951. You've got to read the entire documents because the summations give you the wrong/false impressions.

  • @dpackman

    @dpackman

    Күн бұрын

    ​@@yassassin6425 not a metaphor, they knew the truth

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    Күн бұрын

    ​@@dpackman *_"not a metaphor, they knew the truth"_* It’s a song about the allure of Hollywood and being famous, but acknowledging the dark side to such a Faustian pact. Californication is a song about the underbelly of American society. There’s deceit, plasticity, and desperation under the facade of the American Dream. The lyrics reflect these extremes - both the elaborate gilded nature of it all and the darkness underneath. In essence, it’s a song about the rot that lies just underneath the surface. Californication is a particular ethos packaged as a cultural commodity and broadcast throughout the world in order to penetrate into other cultures. In addition to exploring the all pervasive nature of this, he observes the shallow attitude of Hollywood and celebrity fame and the desire of the entire world to join in on it. He highlights the superficiality of the packaged California dream using Hollywood as an example of the phony illusion created. The suggestion that a distorted reality is getting closer to a farfetched sci-fi/fantasy is a disturbing notion that the song broaches. The idea that something as vast as space could be artificially manufactured in a cramped basement highlights the truly limitless scale of Hollywood falsities. The sadness evoked by imagining that there is nothing beyond us, and nowhere left to explore, matches the overall melancholic tone of the song. "The thought of Hollywood controlling the perception of the entire world has larger and more accurate implications than daft conspiracy theories about the moon landings". Anthony Kiedis (September 2000). Do you also take the following line literally? "Alderaan's not far away, it's Californication" Seriously how dim do you have to be that someone has to explain an Anthony Kiedis lyric to you ffs, because you are incapable of interpreting it for yourself?

  • @garyfuzz2434
    @garyfuzz243417 күн бұрын

    The more they explain how they’re going to do it ,makes you realise they nvr done it the first place😂

  • @slbenson5206

    @slbenson5206

    6 күн бұрын

    Yep. Having 10 to 20 tanker rockets makes it pretty clear the Apollo missions could not have flown as advertised.

  • @SteveT-0

    @SteveT-0

    15 сағат бұрын

    again... India had a satellite orbit the moon several years ago and took images of two of the Apollo landing sites (15 and 17 I believe). I suggest you use your favourite search engine and look at these images, that would change your mind.

  • @ivan_viturruma

    @ivan_viturruma

    8 сағат бұрын

    That is true, it never happened.

  • @ivan_viturruma

    @ivan_viturruma

    8 сағат бұрын

    @@SteveT-0 And where are those pictures?

  • @Jackg1949

    @Jackg1949

    Сағат бұрын

    @@SteveT-0 haha

  • @PC-hb3ip
    @PC-hb3ip13 күн бұрын

    They aren't going back because they NEVER went to the moon in the first place ...too hard to fool us now

  • @chrishoward3391

    @chrishoward3391

    11 күн бұрын

    It's not hard to fool us, it's hard to convince a portion of the population. People now don't believe anything from authority. With all the evidence available some people would die before admitting the earth is a sphere. Bizzare times we live in.

  • @user-agheuu0v

    @user-agheuu0v

    10 күн бұрын

    美国人是否曾经登月,对中国人来说并不重要😊 中国只是必须在月球建立基地,如果今后我们在月球看见美国人,会请你们去中国基地吃饭的,中餐😊

  • @pw9133

    @pw9133

    9 күн бұрын

    Have you seen Capricorn 1

  • @Johnny2Feathers

    @Johnny2Feathers

    8 күн бұрын

    @@user-agheuu0v USA will be telling china “Congratulations.. what took you so long to finally get here” 🤣🤣🤣

  • @slbenson5206

    @slbenson5206

    6 күн бұрын

    Exactly. The more details that are revealed about what it will take to get to the moon for real, the more obvious it was faked in the 60s and 70s. Heck, a big part of the reason Artemis 2 is being delayed is because they are needing a lot more time to develop the spacesuits.

  • @dpackman
    @dpackman24 күн бұрын

    President Nixson called the moon from a land-line phone. It shouldn't be to hard today 😂

  • @gordonmitchell729

    @gordonmitchell729

    24 күн бұрын

    🤡👀yeah and in real time too! 🖖

  • @diverdannavyvet9672

    @diverdannavyvet9672

    24 күн бұрын

    That 'land line phone' was patched through a radio transceiver so...Nope. Try again.

  • @dpackman

    @dpackman

    24 күн бұрын

    @diverdannavyvet9672 Baaaa, none of it ever happened, it's all bs. Try again 😂👍

  • @richardlincoln8438

    @richardlincoln8438

    24 күн бұрын

    ​​​@@dpackman How did all of the things that went to the moon and are still there get there ? Santa ? .. Try again.. Sorry, no cute cartoons to punctuate my posting..

  • @dpackman

    @dpackman

    24 күн бұрын

    @@richardlincoln8438 nothing up there, none of it ever happened. Have a great day 👍

  • @hisheighnessthesupremebeing
    @hisheighnessthesupremebeing26 күн бұрын

    Wikipedia -> Apollo 6 -> first line quote : "Apollo 6 (April 4, 1968), also known as AS-502, was the third and final *_UNCREWED_* flight in the United States' Apollo Program ..." So yeah it "clearly" put the non existing crew in mortal danger

  • @marcodavinci1565
    @marcodavinci156515 күн бұрын

    We are still working on it! Its difficult to go to the moon for the first time!

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    15 күн бұрын

    Contrary to your claims, there were nine missions to the moon and six landings. Hope this helps!

  • @MrThe1234guy

    @MrThe1234guy

    10 күн бұрын

    ​@@yassassin6425no there were no missions to the Moon there were no aluminum foil spacecrafts that were able to Traverse space

  • @spidey5324

    @spidey5324

    10 күн бұрын

    @@yassassin6425 According to what? I have never heard it.

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    10 күн бұрын

    @@spidey5324 According to the scientific, technical, historical, independent and third party evidence that you are oblivious to and is manifest, having a voice of its own. And if reality was defined by what you have heard of, there wouldn't be much out there.

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    10 күн бұрын

    @@MrThe1234guy *_"no there were no missions to the Moon"_* Incorrect. There were nine of them and 24 astronauts in total that journeyed to the moon between 1968 and 1972as part of the Apollo Programme. *_"there were no aluminum foil spacecrafts that were able to Traverse space"_* Correct. What made you think that they were made out of aluminium foil? If you go into a house, do you think that it is held up by wallpaper? Incidentally, the plural of 'spacecraft' is 'spacecraft' not "spacecrafts".

  • @anthonymwai8228
    @anthonymwai822813 күн бұрын

    We never went to the moon!

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    13 күн бұрын

    You may not have done but NASA did on nine occasions with six landings. It would have been more had it not been for the premature cancellation of the Apollo Programme and the aborted Apollo 13 landing. Presumably NASA felt the need to inexplicably fake their own failure too?

  • @SteveT-0

    @SteveT-0

    15 сағат бұрын

    again... India had a satellite orbit the moon several years ago and took images of two of the Apollo landing sites (15 and 17 I believe). I suggest you use your favourite search engine and look at these images, that would change your mind.

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    13 сағат бұрын

    @@SteveT-0 He'll simply insist that was faked too. That's the coping mechanism employed by these people if anything challenges the conspiratorial narrative that they have been fed and they cling to.

  • @ivan_viturruma

    @ivan_viturruma

    8 сағат бұрын

    @@yassassin6425 Never happened. 1 time might have been easier to believe with better fakes, but they couldn't leave it at that, and that constant tripping just became a big expensive joke.

  • @ivan_viturruma

    @ivan_viturruma

    8 сағат бұрын

    ​@@SteveT-0 Where is that picture? I believe if I see un-edited photograph from the ground leven of the location. It couldn't be so hard to do if it is possible to send rovers to Mars... For some reason they never done that. Just one rover to the moon and it would show everything and stop the suspicion. But there really are nothing there.

  • @happyskippy
    @happyskippy24 күн бұрын

    280 billion dollars for appolo which had 6 trips to the moon.... And now NASA already spent 90 billion without a single trip yet.

  • @FrankyPi

    @FrankyPi

    7 күн бұрын

    It's over 300 billion today, one Artemis mission costs about the same as one Apollo mission, a few billion dollars, the development of hardware for the whole program is much cheaper in comparison, Saturn V alone cost over 60 billion dollars to develop.

  • @sdrc92126

    @sdrc92126

    Күн бұрын

    nasa is a jobs program

  • @stephenbarrette610

    @stephenbarrette610

    8 сағат бұрын

    That’s Apollo - one P and two L’s

  • @michaelhopkins9726
    @michaelhopkins972627 күн бұрын

    Apollo 6 almost killed the crew? There was no crew as it was an uncrewed test.

  • @TagiukGold

    @TagiukGold

    26 күн бұрын

    Exactly, no one survived Apollo 6.

  • @bxdanny

    @bxdanny

    26 күн бұрын

    Did he mean Gemini 6?

  • @Three_Random_Words

    @Three_Random_Words

    26 күн бұрын

    I'm not familiar with this channel. Does this guy slap them together fast?

  • @MrMambott

    @MrMambott

    26 күн бұрын

    @@Three_Random_Words Sure as hell drags it out ,,, He needs to speed it up 5X at least OR have two channels, one for those that maybe finished Junior School and another for those that read at least one of the many Volumes of Encyclopedia Britannica.

  • @MisterHowzat

    @MisterHowzat

    26 күн бұрын

    ​@@TagiukGold 🤔 Which part of "uncrewed" didn't you understand? Apollo 6 had no crew. It was an uncrewed or unmanned mission. The only Apollo mission in which "no one survived" was Apollo 1.

  • @tepatrilee3009
    @tepatrilee300913 күн бұрын

    #1. The Saturn 5 was a custom, specialized rocket meant for a single purpose. #2. All Saturn 5 rockets were single use. Build a new rocket. Launch. Gone. Next mission? Build an entirely new Saturn 5 rocket. Every single mission. #3. There were 15 Saturn 5 rockets built, 12-13 went to space, none were ever re-used. #4. Space Shuttles were built for extensive, repeated use. There were only 6 ever built, 5 ever used in space, and those 5 went to space 135 times. #5. If we were still using Saturn 5, we would have had to build 135 Saturn 5 rockets to do what the 5 Space Shuttles accomplished. #6. There are dozens of other rocket classes that put things in space all the time and are significantly cheaper. They just don't carry people.

  • @aaaaa5272

    @aaaaa5272

    12 күн бұрын

    #5 is not correct.

  • @xploration1437

    @xploration1437

    11 күн бұрын

    Most people know nothing of the Saturn V.

  • @kafka27

    @kafka27

    11 күн бұрын

    HAHAHA 🤣😂

  • @peternorthrup6274
    @peternorthrup627419 күн бұрын

    When they brought back the battle ships during the 80s they had to bring back the old timers to show many how to run the boilers and other systems.

  • @AkulaSpawn
    @AkulaSpawn26 күн бұрын

    The answer to why we cannot go back is pretty easy to figure out.

  • @MisterHowzat

    @MisterHowzat

    26 күн бұрын

    Will watch out for your video explaining why.

  • @hansjorgkunde3772

    @hansjorgkunde3772

    26 күн бұрын

    @@MisterHowzat I guess he meant if you never were there you can not 'Go back'

  • @MisterHowzat

    @MisterHowzat

    26 күн бұрын

    @@hansjorgkunde3772 Yes, I'm certain that was the meaning. But I want to see his presentation explaining why he says so.

  • @ArcadeMusicTribute

    @ArcadeMusicTribute

    25 күн бұрын

    yup. The fact you're not allowed to say it out loud without being attacked is just more evidence for what you're not allowed to say but yet everyone knows it now. :D

  • @picnic66

    @picnic66

    25 күн бұрын

    Gulp. Aliens?

  • @coolaf186
    @coolaf18626 күн бұрын

    There are several inaccuracies in this video but the ones that really caught my attention were that SpaceX Starship's 33 Raptor engines generate over 16 million pounds of thrust which is nearly twice that of the Saturn V rockets thrust. Also, SpaceX's Starship (with Super Heavy rockets) stands about 31 feet taller than NASA's Saturn V rockets.

  • @PhilTParker

    @PhilTParker

    25 күн бұрын

    I think the details are in the language being used. “Starship” is the upper stage of the fully stacked rocket. So Starship (or “SS”) sits atop the SuperHeavy rocket (or “SH”). So SH can get SS to NEO. Apparently SS can’t propel itself to the moon directly afterwards because of its incredible size. Remember it can accommodate 100 people or 100 tons…something like that. I think 100 people require a great deal of heavy life support equipment and materials, supplies, food etc. Ok. Now we have big old SS up in orbit. So it has equipment for the moon. But it needs more fuel that couldn’t come along for the ride in addition with the moon equipment. So that may be why another 15 or so SS fuel tanker launches are needed in order to add enough fuel to send SS to the moon. I never understood any of this until thinking it through in the writing of this post. Please let me know if I’m not correct; I’m happy to edit it if I’m wrong…I just want to fully understand the problem that we have in terms of why SS can’t just be launched and fly to the moon in one shot.

  • @imconsequetau5275

    @imconsequetau5275

    25 күн бұрын

    The Super heavy block-one version presently generates 74.4 MN (16.7 million lbf) thrust. While Saturn IV generated 34.5 million newtons (7.6 million pounds). More than double. SH is 71 m (233 ft) tall, while Starship is 50.3 m (165 ft). Saturn 5 was 110.6 m (363 ft) tall. So 35' taller than Saturn V. Starship block-2 will have stretched tanks in both booster and second stage, with 35 Raptors in SH, 6 sea-level and 3 vacuum Raptors in Starship. This should increase real payload capacity from 45 mt [presently] up to 110 mt (242550 lb). Block-2 is going to be used for the HLS contract unless block-3 arrives sooner than expected.

  • @Bobcat665

    @Bobcat665

    25 күн бұрын

    ​@@imconsequetau5275Dude, you got your data on the Starship Blk 2 backwards: It's going to have 6 vacuum engines and 3 sea level engines. As for the actual moon lander, that's going to need an almost entirely different engine configuration altogether because the moon has no atmosphere and a loose, rocky surface - no hardened landing pads there yet.

  • @imconsequetau5275

    @imconsequetau5275

    25 күн бұрын

    @@Bobcat665 Of course we know that Starship HLS is going to have high-mounted landing engines. Where did you find definitive specs on block-2 ? I couldn't just trust any artist's depictions, so I concluded practically that SpaceX wouldn't risk the additional cost of 3 more vacuum Raptors until the recovery rate exceeded 85%, or 7 recovered Starships. The tanker versions could easily exceed 3 gravity but you also want to rapidly accumulate a lot of experience with human rated designs. So, using 3, 4, or 6 vacuum Raptors for tankers will depend on how much you are going to allow acceleration to exceed 3 gravity, and also on gravity drag equations. As the ship weight drops from ~2100 mt down to ~200 mt, you shut off all but one sea level engine in stages and then throttle down and shutoff pairs of vacuum Raptors to stay within load spec. The vacuum bell mass of shut-down engines, and how long they are dead weight, are factors.

  • @imconsequetau5275

    @imconsequetau5275

    25 күн бұрын

    @@Bobcat665 Of course we know that Starship HLS is going to have high-level landing engines. What's your source on block-2 vacuum engines? Artist depictions?

  • @livingtribunal4110
    @livingtribunal411016 сағат бұрын

    It wasn't hard to return to the Moon, which is why NASA successfully completed 5 further moon-landing missions: • Apollo 12 (Nov '69) • Apollo 14 (Jan '71) • Apollo 15 (July '71) • Apollo 16 (April '72) • Apollo 17 (Dec '72)

  • @adbuuk
    @adbuuk23 күн бұрын

    Apollo 6 DID NOT HAVE ASTRONAUTS ABOARD MY GOOD FRIEND.

  • @wdd3141
    @wdd314124 күн бұрын

    Arthur C. Clarke commented on the Space Shuttle program, describing it as a camel -- that is, a horse designed by committee. He'd mentioned that the program had Federal legislators arranging to have parts built in their districts to provide jobs for their constituents, and that the shuttle design was so poor it "strained its guts to work."

  • @azerovc
    @azerovc14 күн бұрын

    We can’t go back to where we have never been.

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    13 күн бұрын

    On the contrary, there were nine manned missions to the moon and six landings. It would have been more had it not been for the premature cancellation of the Apollo Programme and the aborted Apollo 13 mission - (presumably NASA also inexplicably felt the need to fake a failure?)

  • @zalllon

    @zalllon

    12 күн бұрын

    Totally agree. With so many fake photos pretending to be taken from the moon, and the Van Allen Belts, we should all agree about the hoax that it was. It was a PR scheme used to cover up spy satellite launches, and to distract the exorbitant amount of tax payer dollars spent on the space program (defence budget). Everyone needs to get their head out of the sand.

  • @michaels4255

    @michaels4255

    11 күн бұрын

    @@yassassin6425 Maybe they actually tried to do it for real that time, or maybe that was a fake too (go circle around in low earth orbit for a few days, then return "from the moon"), but even on shorter, simpler missions things can go wrong sometimes, like the Challenger disaster. Please remember that no one has ever claimed that astronauts did not go into space, just that they did not cross the Van Allen belt.

  • @MrThe1234guy

    @MrThe1234guy

    10 күн бұрын

    ​@@yassassin6425man don't believe everything they tell you It is very clear that man has never been to the Moon look at the aluminum foil spacecraft that they sent no way those were able to Traverse space and land on the Moon that is a joke especially with the technology that they had

  • @MrThe1234guy

    @MrThe1234guy

    10 күн бұрын

    ​@@yassassin6425man don't believe everything they tell you It is very clear that man has never been to the Moon look at the aluminum foil spacecraft that they sent no way those were able to Traverse space and land on the Moon that is a joke especially with the technology that they had

  • @gabrielleete2691
    @gabrielleete269116 күн бұрын

    In 1.5 years Artemis will send a manned mission around the moon, if it happens I'll make a video of me eating my own shoe.

  • @misterfister7262

    @misterfister7262

    13 күн бұрын

    Imma check back with you in 1.5 years.

  • @Aibo-cx9gw

    @Aibo-cx9gw

    12 күн бұрын

    @@misterfister7262 And I want to know what kind of shoe it is already! =)

  • @slbenson5206

    @slbenson5206

    6 күн бұрын

    Yup. Artemis being behind schedule and over budget is a sign they are trying to do it for real. The fact that Apollo was always on schedule is a big red flag.

  • @JohnVJay

    @JohnVJay

    6 күн бұрын

    @@slbenson5206 "The fact that Apollo was always on schedule" You sure about that?

  • @mikepennington8088
    @mikepennington808825 күн бұрын

    Apollo 6 was an unmanned spaceflight. The engine that failed was a J2 on the second stage. None of the F1 engines on the first stage ever failed.

  • @Zorro33313

    @Zorro33313

    24 күн бұрын

    cuz F1 never existed lol

  • @mikepennington8088

    @mikepennington8088

    24 күн бұрын

    @@Zorro33313 What makes you think that?

  • @captlazer5509

    @captlazer5509

    23 күн бұрын

    ​@mikepennington8088 because a million people in person watching a Saturn V go to the moon never existed in the deluded minds of two-bit trolls

  • @Zorro33313

    @Zorro33313

    22 күн бұрын

    @@captlazer5509 wut. noone's been watching Satrun V go to the moon lol. "in person" lmao

  • @Zorro33313

    @Zorro33313

    22 күн бұрын

    @@mikepennington8088 "Occam's razor" principle, "burden of proof" principle, "extraordinary claims require extraordinary proofs" principle.

  • @macavelli8905
    @macavelli890524 күн бұрын

    You have to admit it's a decent movie so part two is on Mars ... One day yes one day we're going to the moon maybe 🧐

  • @gewoonfrank478
    @gewoonfrank4782 күн бұрын

    You had an entire country that was dedicated to reaching the moon, at any cost. That's what happens when an entire nation is united in reaching a goal, anything is possible. Now you know why they wanna keep us divided.

  • @ikoik7528
    @ikoik75284 күн бұрын

    It is much harder if you never been there at first place

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    3 күн бұрын

    On the contrary, there were nine crewed missions to the moon and six landings. It would have been more were it not for the premature cancellation of the programme and the aborted Apollo 13 landing - that presumably NASA inexplicably felt the need to fake too?

  • @publicmail2
    @publicmail227 күн бұрын

    A big part that had to be done was the development of the parallel titan for delivery of a nuclear warhead.

  • @philippekunzle8233
    @philippekunzle823324 күн бұрын

    Occam Razor… simple explanation tends to be the right one.

  • @orion9k
    @orion9k4 күн бұрын

    We never went to the Moon.

  • @bloodredsky24

    @bloodredsky24

    3 күн бұрын

    I thought you were going to say you never went to school. My bad.

  • @paulsultana8683

    @paulsultana8683

    19 сағат бұрын

    @@bloodredsky24 I saw it while at school great movie by Stanley Kubrick 🤣

  • @therealzilch

    @therealzilch

    18 сағат бұрын

    @@JustChillin740 As you know, I already answered you, but now your post has disappeared. Did you delete it?

  • @SteveT-0

    @SteveT-0

    15 сағат бұрын

    India had a satellite orbit the moon several years ago and took images of two of the Apollo landing sites (15 and 17 I believe). I suggest you use your favourite search engine and look at these images, that would change your mind.

  • @ivan_viturruma

    @ivan_viturruma

    8 сағат бұрын

    That is true. Never happened.

  • @richardguyse4850
    @richardguyse485010 күн бұрын

    Because we never went in the first place.

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    10 күн бұрын

    Jeez, this again? Change the record mate.

  • @ivan_viturruma

    @ivan_viturruma

    8 сағат бұрын

    @@yassassin6425 Never happened. 1 time might have been easier to believe with better fakes, but they couldn't leave it at that, and that constant tripping just became a big expensive joke.

  • @folk.
    @folk.26 күн бұрын

    It's way cheaper to produce complicated parts, computational power, simulations, than in the 60's, so the budget argument is somewhat meh.

  • @iwh7

    @iwh7

    23 күн бұрын

    its not in the 60`they took a LOT of risks and risky decisions. That alone means anything regarding to bild the tech WILL cost more.

  • @RisingTidesAC

    @RisingTidesAC

    23 күн бұрын

    There was NO BUDGET. Unlimited funding to accomplish this by the end of the decade.

  • @chadbrownlee3144

    @chadbrownlee3144

    22 күн бұрын

    ::: laughs in machinist ::: Buddy, you have no clue what you're talking about.

  • @seven7ns
    @seven7ns25 күн бұрын

    Truths are short and simple......

  • @daveb8362
    @daveb836219 күн бұрын

    The culture of giving As to everyone from primary grades through college graduation regardless of their actual education has a lot to do with it. A previous commenter hit the nail on the head with his comparison of car owners' manuals of the 60s and now. Today, the education establishment hits the nail on the thumb!

  • @dr.merlot1532
    @dr.merlot15326 күн бұрын

    I have a solution to going back to where we have never been to. However it requires time travel.

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    6 күн бұрын

    On the contrary, there were nine crewed missions to the moon in total with six landings. It would have been more had it not been for Congress pulling the funding and the premature cancellation of the Apollo Programme in addition to the aborted landing of Apollo 11. - Presumably for some inexplicable reason NASA saw fit to fake their own failure too?

  • @SheeplessShepherd
    @SheeplessShepherd25 күн бұрын

    Mate, just stop talking about it, you're bringing it on top

  • @michaeljames5936
    @michaeljames593625 күн бұрын

    "Two hundred and eighty billion!!" "My God, Man! That's almost twenty weeks of military spending." "What's that, you say?... Peace? For five whole months? Get real!"

  • @kenfryer2090

    @kenfryer2090

    24 күн бұрын

    It pays a lot of salaries and companies. Keeps a lot of corrupt politicians friends happily. The point though, is defense is objectively useful and popular with voters. But going to the moon, to do what, is not. You will please a few percent of voters and make nerds excited going to the moon. If there was an asteroid on its way to earth in 5 years, we would be to the moon in a year, Mars in 2 and intercept the asteroid in 3.

  • @leskobrandon691

    @leskobrandon691

    23 күн бұрын

    More like 13 or 14 weeks.

  • @iwh7

    @iwh7

    23 күн бұрын

    ITs NOT peace, its inviting crazy guyd to do even more. as soon as they realize you are not defending yourself. Its Just the beginning of something WAY More Negative. dont be so naive.

  • @michaeljames5936

    @michaeljames5936

    21 күн бұрын

    @@iwh7 Well, I was referencing the idea of a modest reduction in military spending, rather than sacking every soldier and sending them home for five months, or 13-14 weeks as your fellow commenter has said. When have you heard of any initiative to rein in military spending, even to reduce nuclear warheads. Why wouldn't it be possible to negotiate a 10% reduction in arms spending among, say, the biggest five or ten spending nations. No one would be put at risk, as everyone was doing the same. Why isn't anyone even suggesting this? Arms lobby money, perhaps?

  • @michaeljames5936

    @michaeljames5936

    21 күн бұрын

    @@leskobrandon691 Ever the optimist, me. I probably forgot the present funding of two 'wars' abroad.

  • @johnf-americanreacts1287
    @johnf-americanreacts128721 күн бұрын

    This was excellent. I’ve been wondering about this.

  • @HyloWard
    @HyloWard9 күн бұрын

    Don't really think we've been there,to begin with.💕👽

  • @dougwood8549

    @dougwood8549

    9 күн бұрын

    Don't really think you know what you're talking about. Every single conspiracy theory has been trashed thousands of times. If you weren't afraid of being proven wrong, all you'd have to do is Google every theory. You keep on believing we didn't go, and the rest of us will just stick to being normal. How's that.

  • @theflixcapacitor1372
    @theflixcapacitor137224 күн бұрын

    Astronaut Don Pettit- "I'd go to the moon in a nano second. The problem is we don't have the technology to do that anymore. We used to, but we destroyed that technology, and it's a painful process to build it back again."

  • @TheSteveSteele

    @TheSteveSteele

    24 күн бұрын

    Everyone takes this quote out of context. It doesn’t help that his choice of words was lazy. He’s stating the obvious though. After Apollo, NASA moved on to the Space Shuttle. The industry that was built up around the Saturn V was abandoned because it was no longer needed, and the engineers that worked on the Saturn V retired. Now 50+ years later we’d have to build up the entire Saturn V industry which would cost trillions probably. A new infrastructure is being built. But it has to be done right, or the whole mission will fail. It’s pretty damn sad that there are people like you that just laugh it off like a joke, when there were thousands of families that gave their entire existence to make Apollo happen and get Americans to the moon. I should know. I grew up in a NASA family. My father was rarely home because he gave most of his adult life to make sure the Apollo missions succeeded. My family knew most of the Gemini and Apollo astronauts. We know the truth because we lived through it. Everyday.

  • @joshuafichtelman2605

    @joshuafichtelman2605

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@TheSteveSteeleFalse narrative. We never went to the moon. You can't land on a light.

  • @jaimealfaro200

    @jaimealfaro200

    24 күн бұрын

    Hahaha, this is funny.

  • @jaimealfaro200

    @jaimealfaro200

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@TheSteveSteeleblah, blah, blah...

  • @TheSteveSteele

    @TheSteveSteele

    24 күн бұрын

    @@jaimealfaro200 Prove me wrong. You can’t.

  • @hime273
    @hime27324 күн бұрын

    The Psy-Op that never dies.🙄

  • @amarshmuseconcepta6197

    @amarshmuseconcepta6197

    24 күн бұрын

    😆 Only in America 🐏🐑"led by da da-da🏁🤺🎯🤬 ts

  • @lucious313

    @lucious313

    14 күн бұрын

    60+ yrs and people believe this stuff? We have HD cameras yet no HD images of space

  • @sdrc92126

    @sdrc92126

    7 күн бұрын

    @@lucious313 What do you mean no HD images of space? I've seen thousands of high res space images.

  • @jg3368
    @jg33683 күн бұрын

    Cant go back because Stanley Kubrick died.

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    3 күн бұрын

    Jeez, anything original to say instead of what some dumb meme on social media told you to think?

  • @apolloskyfacer5842

    @apolloskyfacer5842

    Күн бұрын

    Oh that's right. It's all to do with Stanley Kubrick filming the SIX Apollo Moon Landing Missions at a vacant Air Force Base somewhere. Or was it Studio 38 in Burbank, Or was it in Studio 54 Hollywood ? Or in Arizona ? Or in Utah ? Or in New Mexico ? Wait ! That's it ! It was in Area 51 Nevada. For goodness sake, get over it. 🤣

  • @RA-eo6rv
    @RA-eo6rv7 күн бұрын

    The word “ excuses “ make sense in this video

  • @russofam.1090
    @russofam.109024 күн бұрын

    Dr. Paul. How did the astronauts in 1969 survive the Van Allen radiation belt? How are we going to get through this time?

  • @martinattwood7801

    @martinattwood7801

    22 күн бұрын

    They didnt . And they wont . 😅

  • @russofam.1090

    @russofam.1090

    22 күн бұрын

    @@martinattwood7801 Yes sir. People like doctor Paul are supposed to be the smart ones. lol

  • @gamerxt333

    @gamerxt333

    20 күн бұрын

    ​@@martinattwood7801 🥴

  • @sdrc92126

    @sdrc92126

    7 күн бұрын

    google is your friend. It's amazing 30 years later and people still don't know how to use it to find information

  • @freakyfred543
    @freakyfred54324 күн бұрын

    I was very surprised when I asked Chat GPT if anyone has ever drilled a hole on the moon and found out no space mission has.

  • @nick_vigerfil

    @nick_vigerfil

    8 күн бұрын

    And you do really "believe" ? A code programed from humans and humans have subjective view of situations....🤔 I don't know what do you believe, but i would be very very sceptical even for A.I. and if is manipulative,so yes there is a debate if humans step on moon BUT even the moon landing arguments have many many plot holes, so the bottom line is something subjective, unfortunately after all this they make the public opinion to doubt for something but we really don't know what they get if they make people believe false hypothesis, so the final bottom line is all we must sceptic with the non moon landing sceptic theory....!!!!

  • @johnnolang3734
    @johnnolang373415 күн бұрын

    I am an old fellow that started computing in 1968, the year before Apollo 10. These days the computing power of cell phones are quite literally millions of times faster (GHz instead of kHz) with millions of times the memory (Gbytes instead of kBytes). Just think about that for a moment. Hell, that took some programming skill.

  • @patrickspader4062

    @patrickspader4062

    9 күн бұрын

    There is a great you tube video about the software that did it. Search for the Apollo computer.

  • @wrightmf

    @wrightmf

    8 күн бұрын

    well yes, but there are reasons and motivation for more powerful computing. Though Apollo computers were very primitive, they rode a vehicle with a zillion horsepower. ***THAT*** is what is needed to go to the moon, otherwise we'll end up like Soviets trying to perfect the N1.

  • @sdrc92126

    @sdrc92126

    7 күн бұрын

    @@wrightmf It does not take much computing power to fly a rocket, or anything else for that matter.. It's little more than solving F=ma twenty times a second. Maybe x(t) = A1 cos(ω0t) + A2 sin(ω0t), where A1 and A2 are constants for landing the LEM. You _can_ get more sophisticated, but it's all the same complexity of equations that are solved every 50ms or so. Calculated desired position and use the difference from the current position to find the steering and thrust output and repeat the same thing over and over.

  • @Pyrolonn
    @Pyrolonn11 күн бұрын

    Apollo 6 was unmanned. So the engine problems you mention didn't "nearly kill the crew"

  • @thomasfholland
    @thomasfholland25 күн бұрын

    The NASA budget decreased in proportion to the increases of the Vietnam war. The Vietnam war killed the Apollo project. My dad who worked his entire life at NASA/JPL always said that the NASA administration and bureaucrats can screw anything up. When the engineers get to do what they’re best at doing will get you more than the desired result. Like Voyager 1 & 2 - they were told that they shouldn’t try and build anything that could do more than make a flyby to Jupiter and Saturn. My dad and his coworkers said ok sure. And then they just went ahead and made sure that both of the probes would make it a lot farther, even going to interstellar space. Rest In Peace dad, your Voyager probes are still on their way.

  • @tmo4330

    @tmo4330

    25 күн бұрын

    No one ever went beyond low earth orbit.

  • @Zorro33313

    @Zorro33313

    24 күн бұрын

    vietnam war is still ongoing? wow didn't know.

  • @oojimmyflip

    @oojimmyflip

    24 күн бұрын

    they are running on nuclear batteries, why dont we have nuclear batteries in EVs?

  • @chuckevans2792

    @chuckevans2792

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@oojimmyflipWe have schools turning out psychopaths, and imported half of the Venezuela prison population?

  • @chuckevans2792

    @chuckevans2792

    24 күн бұрын

    🎉Kudos to your Dad, Voyager was so exciting for me!

  • @VanDuc-hm6sp
    @VanDuc-hm6sp24 күн бұрын

    NASA Hollywood Collaboration is FAR Easier than real landing on the Moon😂😂😂😂

  • @amarshmuseconcepta6197

    @amarshmuseconcepta6197

    24 күн бұрын

    😆 Yup! 🚀 hellywood basement🏁🤺 ya know the tune..💰.. *follow*

  • @ChitoV646

    @ChitoV646

    23 күн бұрын

    hit 2x speed settings ​@@amarshmuseconcepta6197moon walks😂

  • @ChitoV646

    @ChitoV646

    23 күн бұрын

    Ckmy ch

  • @jackietreehorn5561

    @jackietreehorn5561

    13 күн бұрын

    Alridn dropped a feather and a hammer at the same time and landed together

  • @amarshmuseconcepta6197

    @amarshmuseconcepta6197

    12 күн бұрын

    @@jackietreehorn5561 😆"Hey Jackie how's the *Dude* still alive I've heard but dodging the hellywood 🎥film *sett* 😈🏁🤺 🎬👎

  • @mnebinger
    @mnebinger10 күн бұрын

    Apollo 6 was unmanned. No one was in jeopardy on that flight. Guess if you can't get that right, I have to wonder how much of the rest of this is accurate.

  • @coma13794
    @coma1379415 күн бұрын

    The descent from parked orbit to the moon is incredible to review in detail, too. There is an enthusiast who gave a talk that was posted to YT which goes into detail on the Apollo guidance computer. Amazing stuff.

  • @patgervasio7044
    @patgervasio704422 күн бұрын

    There were no astronauts on Apollo 6.

  • @Simmonique
    @Simmonique24 күн бұрын

    (8:15) Billions are invested in wars. Governments have more appetite for that these days. It's a choice, innovation or destruction?

  • @sdrc92126
    @sdrc9212611 күн бұрын

    It's not hard to return. It's hard to find a reason _to_ return.

  • @cpubcpub-gn3rv

    @cpubcpub-gn3rv

    7 күн бұрын

    Is hard to find a reason to go to school too

  • @sdrc92126

    @sdrc92126

    7 күн бұрын

    @@cpubcpub-gn3rv It's getting that way, but 20 years ago it way one of the only way to learn things

  • @jackietreehorn5561

    @jackietreehorn5561

    6 күн бұрын

    @@sdrc92126 the only man I seen that never went to school and one of the most intelligent men ever was Muhammad Ali.... articulate and had an education that no university education or book smarts could ever teach

  • @ifldiscovery8500

    @ifldiscovery8500

    6 күн бұрын

    we are going for exact same reason we went last time. ​@@sdrc92126

  • @sdrc92126

    @sdrc92126

    6 күн бұрын

    @@jackietreehorn5561 I've had some pretty high powered tech jobs and all but maybe one, I could have easily done straight out of high school. College was good for the experience, but almost all of it was forgotten in a few years never having been put into practice. Everything is a scam

  • @neshnesh4633
    @neshnesh4633Күн бұрын

    The moon must be left alone 😂

  • @David-tt2mt
    @David-tt2mt25 күн бұрын

    Capricorn One was an excellent example of dotting I's and crossing T's.

  • @NX6.2
    @NX6.214 күн бұрын

    How hard could it possibly be? They nailed it on the first try! 😄

  • @ivan_viturruma

    @ivan_viturruma

    7 сағат бұрын

    1 time might have been easier to believe with better fakes, but they couldn't leave it at that, and that constant tripping made it just a big joke.

  • @NX6.2

    @NX6.2

    7 сағат бұрын

    @@ivan_viturruma Agreed 100%

  • @thedudeabides3138
    @thedudeabides31387 күн бұрын

    Great essay, well done, thank you for taking the time to compose and post.

  • @brahilly
    @brahilly7 күн бұрын

    I suspect that I'm not the only one to contest the narrator's claim that Apollo VI had a problem that put the crew's lives at risk. There's no evidence for that. This error affects the credibility of this entire video.

  • @tbarrelier
    @tbarrelier24 күн бұрын

    Is it me, or does this Artemis thing look like a disaster waiting to happen? There is so much that could go wrong with such a complicated approach.

  • @russofam.1090
    @russofam.109024 күн бұрын

    Doctor Paul. How much fuel did it take to get to the moon the first time. How much fuel is estimated to get us there now?

  • @ChitoV646

    @ChitoV646

    23 күн бұрын

    Zero energy anti gravidic survey says..$0.00.00🤓👆🚨😜

  • @benitocamelas7238
    @benitocamelas7238Күн бұрын

    Most of us will pass away without seeing any man over moon, cos "It is photosoped, it has to!!!"

  • @bombergaming4030
    @bombergaming403019 күн бұрын

    What a badass video, you definitely deserve a sub!

  • @williesnyder2899
    @williesnyder289925 күн бұрын

    Lost “institutional knowledge” is much like Grandma’s cornbread recipe that wasn’t written down and hasn’t been successfully duplicated despite many attempts. A top boss of my past employer not only tossed out all the copies of the physically thick and comprehensive established Policy & Procedures books…in order to start over under a new administration…but also denigrated the vast knowledge base of the combined staff, the people with tried and true skills, the people with bright and shiny ideas… The results weren’t at all positive. The “cornbread” wasn’t fit for a hungry squirrel!!

  • @chuckevans2792

    @chuckevans2792

    24 күн бұрын

    😢Univac was a tech leader but laid off the engineers that kept it all running.

  • @richardlincoln8438

    @richardlincoln8438

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@chuckevans2792 Very much like Boeing being an industry leader until the merger and they replaced the engineering staff with accountants.

  • @petermcgill1315

    @petermcgill1315

    23 күн бұрын

    Yeah, instead of buying a Mustang, I asked Ford for a new Model A. They couldn’t do it. Some here would say that was evidence that the Model A never existed.

  • @ChitoV646

    @ChitoV646

    22 күн бұрын

    I get your message but in this case there was absolutely no squirrel or recipe for space blue ribbons simply because they were not able to get to the moon but we're actually perpetrating the vinacular w slow motion technology... Yes no technology for none needed..pick any moonwalk sir and go to speed settings,2xfast is real time and there's nothing else to say about it, but it's the truth...no cap , no way ,ck my ch.🤔

  • @louismcglasson7913

    @louismcglasson7913

    8 күн бұрын

    @@petermcgill1315They could, but automobiles are massed produced, thus it would make it cost-prohibitive. Space rockets like Saturn V aren’t, they were custom made and also very expensive, but very possible to replicate today.

  • @swilsonmc2
    @swilsonmc226 күн бұрын

    Everyone check your pockets! If we can find that missing telemetry data, then we're halfway there!

  • @mako88sb

    @mako88sb

    26 күн бұрын

    The only reason you know about the missing telemetry data tapes is because NASA released the information about it. All the data from the telemetry tapes was documented. Every Gemini and Apollo mission report is available online as is all the preliminary science reports. These reports include most of that data from the missing telemetry tapes. People like you are absolutely clueless about the sheer magnitude of what would be involved to pull a hoax like this off. I've asked numerous hoax believers to explain away all these points listed below and they can only come up with the typical hoax believer answer. Until you people can come up with something better that can be verified by credible experts in the relevant fields involved, then as far as I'm concerned, the moon landing hoax theory is right up there with the flat-Earth nonsense. Credible, btw, means somebody willing to have his/her work/evidence subjected to review by their peers. Endless speculation, conjecture and theories without proof don’t count: 1) 400,000 people were involved with the project, yet nobody has come forward with evidence that the landings never happened. You guys like to bring up the Manhattan Project compartmentalization security that kept only the ones in the need to know fully aware of what was going on. Yeah, sure. A top secret military project that kept even vice president Truman out of the loop being compared to a project like Apollo that was as publicly open as possible. Yet despite all the USA's attempts to keep the A-bomb project under wraps Russia still managed to get key people in the right places to provide them enough info that they developed their own bomb much sooner than the USA expected. You seriously expect us to believe that in the past 50+ years since the landings were supposedly staged, nobody has come forward with insider information or definitive proof? Yeah, right. ->Typical hoax believer answer: (Something involving a worldwide conspiracy with zero credible proof) 2) The Russians tracked and confirmed all 6 of the Apollo moon landings. They offered to help with Apollo 13. Why would the USA's major competitor during the space race do that? ->Typical hoax believer answer: (Something involving a worldwide conspiracy with zero credible proof) 3) Russia, Europe, China, India and Japan have all flown missions to the moon. So far, none of these countries/nations have brought forth any evidence that it's impossible to do a manned mission to it. That includes this nonsense about the radiation in the VAB's being too hazardous to pass through. No radiation expert from any country including the ones mentioned here have ever stated that the radiation in the VAB's was an insurmountable problem during the Apollo missions to the moon. Why is that? ->Typical hoax believer: (Something involving a worldwide conspiracy with zero credible proof) 4) Scientist from around the world for the past 50+ years have verified and peer reviewed the lunar rock & core samples plus all the data transmitted back to Earth by the ALSEP's left behind. There's also the Apollo 16 UV telescope images that include some of Earth that no astronomer for the past 50+ years has ever found fault with. How do you explain this? ->Typical hoax believer: (Something involving a worldwide conspiracy with zero credible proof) 5) Hoax believers have for the last 50+ years tried to find evidence that the landings were faked and have found nothing that can't be debunked. The proof they failed is that despite all their efforts, the missions are still in the history books. A story of that magnitude would have been seized on by investigative reporters and news networks. Not just the USA but countries from around the world would have gone after the biggest scoop in history. Explain how come they haven't. ->Typical hoax believer: (Something involving a worldwide conspiracy with zero credible proof) 6) Third party evidence from countries outside the USA that NASA would have had to orchestrate and coordinate flawlessly while at the same time supposedly hoaxing the mission; How could they manage that without insider proof coming forward for the past 50+ years to blow the whistle on it all? ->Typical hoax believer: (Something involving a worldwide conspiracy with zero credible proof) Trying to discredit information because it came from NASA, as I'm sure you'll do, is a bit ridiculous. They made all the engineering and science required to pull the missions off available to their counterparts from all kinds of countries throughout the world. In regards to the Apollo landings, we are talking about hundreds of 1000's if not millions of people with above average intelligence in various countries throughout the world over a time span of 50+ years. I'm not just talking about the people involved with the project while it was happening. There's also all the scientists and engineers in the following decades that have access to everything related to it regarding the engineering plus all the scientific, peer reviewed evidence, data and samples. Yet in all that time none of these highly intelligent folks from around the world have ever found a way to somehow get information out to anybody about NASA"s alleged duplicity regarding the supposed landing hoax. Considering how incompetent everybody seems to think governments are, it's pretty amazing how people like you have no problem believing that a hoax of this magnitude could have been kept for so long without one piece of verified proof from the hoax believers being brought forward in 50+ years. All you guys have is unsubstantiated claims that require ridiculously more unlikely and equally unverifiable conspiracies within conspiracies to keep the original moon landing conspiracy going. Does that not give you the slightest hint that maybe the moon landing conspiracy is seriously flawed? People who see no problem with that usually dismiss, ignore or don't understand the irrefutable scientific evidence.

  • @charleswest6372

    @charleswest6372

    25 күн бұрын

    Not missing, never was.

  • @rgp8038

    @rgp8038

    25 күн бұрын

    It's gotta be around here somewhere.

  • @kevinclark1685
    @kevinclark16856 күн бұрын

    20 fuel launches to get a single mission, $4 billion cost. India's last moon mission was $75 million, survey south pole, tested subsurface temperature. Oops no water. seems like almost any moon goal, it's better to send a robot. Lunar base, wait till the robots build it. Talking about the rocket cost, Astronauts should just go up there to stay permanently when the base is ready. The returning hardware cost is exponentially huge and dangerous.

  • @jeffgann6613
    @jeffgann661315 күн бұрын

    Excellent analysis presented in an engaging manner. Thank you

  • @bialapodlaska1905
    @bialapodlaska190525 күн бұрын

    I was a high school National Science Foundation intern at Goddard Space Flight Center when Apollo 11 landed on the moon. A few thoughts to consider after watching the film: 1. We are no longer racing the Soviets, but we are racing the Chinese who are hell-bent on colonizing the Moon. 2. Returning to the Moon requires national will and resolve. For that the U.S. needs leadership which is sorely lacking 3. In the 60s the Apollo project was primarily a singular American project. Today we can collaborate with Europe, Japan, India and yes even Russia and many more. We don’t have to do it all ourselves 4. The Apollo program cost a fortune but the technological spin-offs were enormous. 5. Exploring and colonizing the Solar System is a high priority for Mankind and will energize and motivate millions of people, particularly our young to aspire to great achievements at a time when they are lost and confused about the most basic things and values. We are wasting trillions on silly endeavors which could be used to move humanity to heights we can now only dream of. I could go on. Thank you for the film. And Godspeed

  • @Ajaxx827

    @Ajaxx827

    25 күн бұрын

    Wow. Just wow. You should study harder and read less propaganda. We never went! Period. It’s physically impossible and will never happen.

  • @Will_Schrank

    @Will_Schrank

    25 күн бұрын

    @@Ajaxx827wow, you’re just asserting something as fact and insulting someone who made a thoughtful and interesting post and who has a background in science.

  • @peterparker9286

    @peterparker9286

    25 күн бұрын

    ​@@Will_SchrankI thought it was positive to a better future... there is always programs in programs.

  • @Will_Schrank

    @Will_Schrank

    25 күн бұрын

    @@mrchow7517 That was true when Mark Twain said it, and it’s still true today.

  • @ankyspon1701

    @ankyspon1701

    25 күн бұрын

    Sorry you are totally wrong. Russia were miles ahead of us in every aspect of the space race! People don't give up trying, just because one country did it! If Russia could have put a man on the moon then and now, they would have done so, there's trillions of minerals waiting to be had. Funding is NOT the issue. The Van Allen belts and space radiation are! Russia and China have sent Landers to the moon at less than $200million, we spent $10 Billion just on the JWST, with zero payback. The moon is rich in Helium 3 which has a current retail of more than $140 million per tonne!!! Even if we spent 10 Billion sending a mining crew to the moon, we could recoup that money back in Helium 3, in no time.

  • @waynecassels3607
    @waynecassels360724 күн бұрын

    When China surprises the world by landing on the moon, we'll wake up.

  • @TheSteveSteele

    @TheSteveSteele

    24 күн бұрын

    And the moon landing deniers will get scared real fast.

  • @Milan_Openfeint

    @Milan_Openfeint

    24 күн бұрын

    I imagine the answer will be "China doesn't exist, it's just Hollywood and genetically modified Americans." I really wonder what's happening to people, esp. in the US, last ~20 years.

  • @streamer_services

    @streamer_services

    24 күн бұрын

    I could not have said it better myself my friend and when they get there and everybody finds out that none of America's evidence is there....then thats when the shit hits the fan...

  • @TheSteveSteele

    @TheSteveSteele

    24 күн бұрын

    @@streamer_services So China can land on the moon but the Americans never did? Yeah, ok.

  • @codetech5598

    @codetech5598

    16 күн бұрын

    When the Chinese show the Moon does not look like gray cement like Apollo pictures then you will wake up.

  • @nunyabisness4300
    @nunyabisness430012 күн бұрын

    We’ve given Ukraine the equivalent of a one way Apollo trip to the moon. 😂

  • @TripMX
    @TripMX6 күн бұрын

    Impressively entertaining and informative video!!!

  • @mmad3130
    @mmad313026 күн бұрын

    When I was a kid I watched the Apollo missions. I thought with normal progression I'd be going to the moon or mars in my lifetime. Not going to happen. Human advancement just isn't a priority. Wars and getting cetain folks rich seem to be the priorities.

  • @zhizhihhh9400

    @zhizhihhh9400

    22 күн бұрын

    because what you watched is from hollywood. the actual work is a lot harder. and now it is a lot harder to fake it again because there are satellite from other country too.

  • @rickjohnston2667

    @rickjohnston2667

    16 күн бұрын

    Unfortunately, you're probably right.

  • @rickjohnston2667

    @rickjohnston2667

    16 күн бұрын

    My response was to @mmad3130's comment, not the second one.

  • @sdrc92126

    @sdrc92126

    7 күн бұрын

    What do you mean by human advancement? I remember the ISS being hyped as the stepping stone to human advancement or something like that and it's mostly a jobs program and nobody cares.

  • @Space30MINUTES
    @Space30MINUTES26 күн бұрын

    Very good video! I've also wondered about this issue.

  • @AceX1337gaming
    @AceX1337gaming8 күн бұрын

    You deserve the views on this video. You have been plugging away for years and I have noticed it! Congrats, long may it continue and thank you for the video.

  • @randallolson7630
    @randallolson763011 күн бұрын

    You said it will take Artemis 3 two to three days to reach the moon. It took Artemis 1, the uncrewed mission, 5 days to reach moon orbit. How will Artemis 3 do it in half the time? I know Artemis I was in a different type of orbit from Apollo, a “distant retrograde orbit”. Is this why the difference? Will Artemis 3 use the direct orbit as Apollo did?

  • @spaceted3977

    @spaceted3977

    10 күн бұрын

    randallolson7630 It will only take 3 Days to Fake the Artemis Moon Landing using CGI Graphics. But using Model Spacecraft and having to develop cine Film took 5 Days to Fake the Apollo Moon Landings.

  • @slbenson5206

    @slbenson5206

    6 күн бұрын

    You'll really be scratching your head if you look at the timeline Artemis had before it was launched. They estimated between 5 and 11 days to return. I've never seen a decent explanation as to why they dropped one of the loops around the moon to make the trip 25 days as opposed to the 42 they were originally talking about.

  • @HighSEAL
    @HighSEAL24 күн бұрын

    290 billion is nothing compared to what uSA spend on military each year

  • @ats-3693

    @ats-3693

    11 күн бұрын

    NASA's funding for 2024 is $25billion, the US military budget for 2024 is $842billion. It's strange so many people criticise the funding NASA get but are fine with the Military budget, or even go as far as saying NASA is just a scam to steal the funding they get when NASA is a division of the US Government which has a total yearly budget of over $6trillion, so either NASA has the government which they are a part of fooled and are stealing their funding without anyone else in the government figuring out it's a scam, or the US government is in on the scam, when the US government could steal a measly $25billion from taxpayers without even needing any story or scam to cover it, it's peanuts.

  • @50shadesofgreen34
    @50shadesofgreen3424 күн бұрын

    yeah its totally not because of corruption

  • @alanjm1234
    @alanjm123415 күн бұрын

    It's not hard. If we can take a heavy payload into orbit we can go to the moon. And we can do that. The reason nobody has gone back since is simply because there's been no reason to go back, at least not for the very short visits made in the 1960's and 70's. We now plan to go back and stay for months. And that's harder. Food, water, air, accommodation etc has to be scaled up exponentially. And radiation protection too. Because radiation exposure is cumulative. And the probability of being on the moon during a solar flare increases from a low probability to a near certainty. So radiation protection needs to be significantly increased.

  • @peterabraham6925
    @peterabraham692510 күн бұрын

    Because we NEVER WENT. 😅 We're not returning anywhere. We're just now trying to go!😂😂

  • @yassassin6425

    @yassassin6425

    9 күн бұрын

    On the contrary, there were nine crewed missions to the moon. It would have been more had it not been for the premature cancellation of the Apollo Programme and the aborted Apollo 13 landing. Presumably NASA inexplicably felt the need to fake a failure too?

  • @TodaTruth

    @TodaTruth

    8 күн бұрын

    @@yassassin6425they tried until everytime they failed and everytime the rocket 🚀 failed it costs more money and astronauts then they faked it on Hollywood

  • @dchappy6985

    @dchappy6985

    7 күн бұрын

    How dare you, Sir. How dare...

  • @irisbaez1972

    @irisbaez1972

    3 күн бұрын

    @@yassassin6425 no,no,no, they just simple can't steal more money y they become billionaires. Nasa is just a money pig.

  • @SteveT-0

    @SteveT-0

    15 сағат бұрын

    again... India had a satellite orbit the moon several years ago and took images of two of the Apollo landing sites (15 and 17 I believe). I suggest you use your favourite search engine and look at these images, that would change your mind.

  • @eddieo6466
    @eddieo646627 күн бұрын

    The Moonmen said GET OUT AND DON'T COME BACK! Lol

  • @MisterHowzat

    @MisterHowzat

    26 күн бұрын

    Apparently, a deal has been made, likely brokered by the Pledeians (not to be confused with the Plebeians) for the lunar residents to allow Earthlings to play there again.

  • @ronaldgreene5733

    @ronaldgreene5733

    26 күн бұрын

    @brendanradford2859 . . prop up a dead horse in "Backdoor" confirmation through unreliable inside narratives created for the purpose . . or they went there another 5 times anyway and gave the "aliens" the finger -- your choice . . let's all prop up a dead horse . . Did I happen to say Prop up a dead horse? . . in case I failed to mention it -- let's all prop up a dead horse . . Prop up a dead horse

  • @kristjiannne

    @kristjiannne

    26 күн бұрын

    Yeah it sounds funny and I believe it’s true. Seriously

  • @davidkunze2770

    @davidkunze2770

    26 күн бұрын

    We were exportimg too much cheese!!

  • @hansjorgkunde3772

    @hansjorgkunde3772

    26 күн бұрын

    @@MisterHowzat oh that is interesting if true. I was only aware of the deal never come back this Moon is ours. A very funny scenario btw. Here the Earthlings eager to take over the Universe. There a overpopulated Universe settling even Moons.

Келесі