
America's Apollo mission to the moon has been the main target of skepticism by conspiracy theorists, not one.
Has the United States ever landed on the moon? The conspiracy theorists' answer, of course, is no, it's all a hoax, a conspiracy by the U.S. government to deceive the former Soviet Union during the Cold War, and the moon landing scene was filmed in the studio.
Interestingly, although 50 years have passed, there is more and more "evidence" of Apollo's moon landings, and even in the United States, more and more people believe that the moon landings are fake.
According to Gallup's statistics in 1999, 6% of the American people did not believe that the United States had landed on the moon, and by 2013, there was a report that this number had not dropped but had risen, reaching 37%!
In 2018, a new "evidence" of fraud on the Apollo moon landing was added to the long list of questions.
This time, conspiracy theorists noticed that the shoes of Armstrong, the first man to land on the moon, seemed to have something odd.
Conspiracy theorists have found that on the moon, Armstrong's famous "one small step for the individual, one big step for man" footprints have deep grooves;
However, armstrong's lunar space suit on display at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum has a smooth sole without any grooves!
A stone stirs up a thousand waves, a shoe kicks out "fake maniacs"?
Unfortunately, the conspiracy theorists' black glasses are still out of sight this time, and while the shoe prints on the moon don't match the moon suits in the museum, there's a reason for that:
First, when they first landed on the moon on July 20, 1969, Armstrong and other astronauts did wear the Apollo/Skylab A7L spacesuit shown in the picture, but they had more gear, especially slip-on shoes, which did have exactly the same marks on them as the moon footprints.
Second, and most critically, while many people think that this footprint was the first footprint of humanity on the moon, it is not. This footprint photo is not Armstrong's, it was taken by buzz Aldrin, the second man on the moon, to give himself a footprint.
Third, why aren't there shoes on display in museums? Because the boots have been thrown on the moon. In order to reduce the weight of the ascending section of the lunar module, after the conversion to the life protection system of the lunar module, the hood shoes were thrown on the moon along with equipment such as cameras, backpacks in spacesuits (life support systems), and excrement of astronauts.
Of course, since it has been presented as a conspiracy, the conspiracy, however plausible it may be, has become an eternal conspiracy in the eyes of the paranoid, just as it was before the so-called evidence.
Paranoia is the passport of the bigoted, and conspiracy is the brain stone of the conspirator. Once a person suffers from brain stones, any massage of your mind, spiritual soothing, acupuncture, and cortex cupping are ineffective.
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