Page 127 - Lunacy and the Age of Deception
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has afforded numerous individuals an opportunity to discover the telltale signs of a deception.
One of many images which provide evidence of the Moon photos having been staged is displayed
at the top of this post. The image is from the Apollo 14 mission which launched on January 31, 1971.
If a person had no suspicions about the government faking the Moon landings, they might overlook
the telltale signs of the shot having been staged on Earth. Mankind tends to overlook anomalies when
they are not expected. The following image is taken from “The Moon Landing Hoax” website. See
if you can spot the anomaly quicker than the author of that site did. (Note: If you don’t spot the error
and are losing sleep over it, e-mail me and I will help you out.)
I am sure NASA in the 1960s and 1970s did not anticipate so many individuals scrutinizing their
images on powerful home computers, searching for anomalies. They could hardly have anticipated
how ubiquitous computer processors would become in succeeding decades, nor were they likely to
have foreseen the development of the Internet. Many individuals who contend that NASA faked the
Moon landings have pointed out anomalies in the shadows of the images the government assures us
were taken from the lunar surface. The astronauts of the Apollo missions took no auxiliary lighting
with them to aid in their photography. Nor were any of their cameras equipped with flashes. Much
evidence of multiple light sources, such as that which would be used in a staged environment on
Earth, has been found by examining the Apollo images.
In our Solar system, we have one primary source of light. Whether we are standing on the surface
of the Earth or the surface of the Moon, the Sun which is 93 million miles away causes shadows to
manifest in consistent ways. If the ground is flat, or all objects casting a shadow are on the same
plane, the shadows will appear parallel to one another.
If the ground is uneven, a person will observe shadows lying at diverse angles from one another and
being disproportionate in size.