Jrrarglblarg
Unregistered
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2010
- Messages
- 12,673
And down a blind alley too. We may see less of him,school has started.
Gee, I'm lookin' at the time and making a guess about what time zone he's in . . .
And down a blind alley too. We may see less of him,school has started.
They placed reflectors by satellite?
Credibility meet toilet, again.
Wampler had 00 41 15 north 23 26 00 east 10 days before NASA did. Welcome to my world drewid.
- Wikipedia.At 02:39 UTC on Monday July 21 (10:39pm EDT, Sunday July 20), 1969, Armstrong opened the hatch,
Every single one of the samples must be "explained" for any "hoax landing" theory to stand.
I will not disclose the name of one person whom I contacted. For obvious reasons. I would like to carry on my communications with all of them. You are free to do the same. As implied above, you'll get the same answers I did, I am sure. So have at it.
These reflectors most certainly were not "passive", not passive in more ways than one.
He continually says Reed was not 'in on it', because it fits his story. Watch for him to move the goalposts again.
I actually had to PM him to get him to reply to my comment, so may be worth doing it with your post too.
I will not disclose the name of one person whom I contacted.
Gee, I'm lookin' at the time and making a guess about what time zone he's in . . .
Non scientists, it seems, discount or fail to understand the word "Falsify" and all it implies.
Real scientists try with all their might to falsify their own results before turning their theories over to others.
Just post the email you sent and the responses you received. Redact names where necessary.
If they were written letters, well... it sounds like this was a recent activity for you, which makes it all the more impressive that you managed to send a letter across the Pacific and receive a response in such a sort span of time, but... whatever... Scan those letters and redact names where necessary.
Having names would be nice so that we may confirm with these professors that you did indeed contact them about this topic. At the very least we can confirm that someone recently contacted them about this topic, seeing as how you're probably quite unwilling to divulge your own name. Your word isn't worth very much around here. If you believe your position to be absolutely true, you should be willing to work extremely hard to establish your credibility and expose the truth.
I thought about doing that, but... meh...
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH
You haven't met many real scientists have you?
Not a chance.
Do your own research and confirm mine yourself. That is what science is all about is it not?
I am going swimming.
Not a chance. Do your own research and confirm mine yourself. That is what science is all about is it not? After all, to quote one of your colleagues, you guys have been studying this for 40 years and I have been studying only 4 months. Have at it. I am going swimming.
Sorry, you lost me. I am out. See you all later, maybe much later. Not sure if I have anything additional to share. May or may not be back. Best, Patrick.
Some additional facts. None of this comes from me, so no personal attacks please. These are quotes from the professors.
1) "NASA had a very accurate position for the lander --- good to a few ten's of feet,"
(This response was in reference to a question regarding real-time landing coordinate determination capabilities. That is, what "NASA/Houston" claimed in communication with the Lick Observatory staff was their up front accuracy capabilities while the astronauts were on the moon, well before the astronauts took off.)
2) From Professor Wampler;
"Unfortunately, I misunderstood the lander's coordinates which were relayed by telephone and not by a printed medium, such as by fax.** I thought that NASA said 00 41 50, not 00 41 15, and so at first I aimed the telescope at the wrong position."
(This is in reference to what occurred while the astronauts were still on the moon.)
3) "In addition, the software that opened a timing gate for the detector to receive the returning pulse also had a software bug and the gate was opened at completely the wrong time.** It was several days before we got our mistakes sorted out."
(Confirms why it took so long to successfully target the LRRR, timing problem. The coordinates the Lick team was given were perfectly good. Matter of fact, they were exact.)
4) "The Russians could, and did, range to the retro-reflector, but that only tied the Eurasian continent to the moon, not the American continent."
(We could get the French to range the thing from their side. The Russians had no such ally over here, on this side of the Atlantic.)
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH
You haven't met many real scientists have you?