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NASA Apollo 11 | Neil Armstrong Relates to Science Fiction

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Uploaded by on Aug 19, 2007

Neil Armstrong relates the similarities of Jules Verne's science fiction to the reality of the Apollo 11 lunar mission.

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  • to all of you cospirators.... I bet you could come up with enough evidence that like the Apollo program, the Manhattan project was also a fake.. right? Now with the internetyou can discuss so much your common ignorance that it will be self reinforcing for years to come

    what else will you be able to disprove?

    I look forward to your findings...

  • Have you read Operation Northwoods, and what it says about the Apollo program? Google it. How can you trust ANYTHING govt says after that? That's how they killed JFK, since Operation Mongoose was part of Northwoods. Blew his head off on live TV and got away with it. 11 Apollo astronots died on Earth during Apollo. Even Lt Armstrong was a stone cold killer in Korea, as were most of the astronots. They were draft dodging the Vietnam War. USA KIA DOA

  • Watch the post Apollo 11 press meeting on youtube. Armstrong seems to almost struggle when explaining mission related facts. He appears almost pissed that he is even at this conference. Notice the cleverness behind his answers and explanation of mission related material. Him and the astronaut on his left start cracking up a few times during the video. I admire Armstrong's crafty answers and handling of this matter.

    Neil is my hero!

  • "Hidden messages mean one thing."

    Right you are .. If Apollo was ligitimate, then Armstong would not have sent out these cryptic messages, or conducted himself the way he has, reguarding The Apollo Program.

    If you're a true "hero", you don't become a recluse and refuse to discuss the one accomplishment you should be most proud of.

    He may be a humble, unassuming man but that would not account for his highly strange behavior and actions through the years, concerning Apollo.

  • "His professional career ended when he took part in the Apollo fakery, so his pride in his test-pliot days is understandable."

    What is completely understandable to everyone, who has accepted the fact that Apollo was some type of fraud, is that men with integrity can not possibly be proud of achievements that are either a lie or even a partial lie .. Of all the Apollo astronots, I have the most sympathy for Armstrong and the role he was obviously forced to play in that deception.

  • Armstrong is saying that Jules Verne's fictional Moon trip "seems appropriate to us".

    He may only be referring to the similarities, of course, but he goes on to say "the modern-day Columbia". If he was on a real moon-trip he would say "the real, modern-day Columbia", or distinguish the fiction from the present true mission, but he doesn't. Its a psychological slip ommission, revealing that his sub-conscience knew Apollo 11 was fake and wouldn't allow him to use the word "real", or similar word.

  • I agree Stray. I think Armstrong, being first on the "Moon", and being first of the 4 "civilians" out of the 29 NASA/Pentagon a/nots taking part in the Apollo Fraud, may have had some leverage that enabled him to get away with only the minimum in post-Apollo Fraud support.

    His professional career ended when he took part in the Apollo fakery, so his pride in his test-pliot days is understandable.

  • Hidden messages mean one thing.

  • So a cryptic release however hidden must relieve the man, because history will ultimately be his judge and he knows it... perhaps future generations would look at him (once the truth outs) and they will say of him... he tried to tell us.

  • I think his silent obedience is dedicated to his wife and two sons, but i think the argument to convince Armstrong that it was for "God & Country and the American way" (with menaces perhaps) isn't in his nature to sustain... i mean the size of the lie is too great, then again the bigger the lie the more believable (as they say) - it must weigh heavy on his soul, thus the recluse and everything else, pictures etc... a noble lie that eats away at the man, so a cryptic release must relief.

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