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Moon Landing? The Equipment, the Math, and the Lies Don’t Add Up

They told us we went to the Moon.

They told us it was mankind’s greatest achievement.

They told us to stop asking questions.

Well, I did ask.

And the answers? They don’t just fall apart—they collapse under the weight of their own bullshit.

1. The Lunar Module Was Too Small to Carry Everything They Claimed

NASA says they brought:

  • 2 adult men in full suits
  • Oxygen, water, and food for 8 days
  • Navigation, communication, batteries, thermal control
  • Fuel for descent and re-launch
  • Plus gear, tools, experiments, and Moon rocks

All packed into a tin foil capsule smaller than a minivan.

Interior size? Think portable bathroom stall.

2. 12 Cameras… in 1969

They claimed to bring:

  • 3 motion picture cameras (16mm)
  • 6 Hasselblad still cameras
  • Dozens of magazines of film, not digital
  • Camera brackets, mounts, tripods, spare lenses

They also brought:

  • Rock sample tools
  • A flag and pole
  • Seismometers
  • Solar wind and laser reflectors
  • Spare gloves, visors, and full life-support backpacks
  • And somehow had room left to load up rocks to bring home

All inside something you could barely stand up in.

And this was 1969—not exactly the peak of compression design.

3. Life Support? Not a Chance

Each suit had:

  • A portable oxygen pack
  • Minimal cooling
  • Limited backup
  • No serious water supply

They spent 2.5 hours walking in 250°F sunlight with no atmosphere, no shade, and full body exertion.

No overheating? No dehydration? No radiation?

You expect me to believe they survived that with plastic tubes and a backpack full of hopes and dreams?

moon landing claims

4. Van Allen Belts? What Van Allen Belts?

They flew straight through one of the most radioactive zones around Earth—twice.

No shielding. No illness. No decontamination.

Just duct tape and a press conference.

If that was possible, why hasn’t any crew done it since?

5. Re-Entry Fantasy

They hit Earth’s atmosphere at 25,000 mph, survived a fireball of over 5,000°F, and the capsule looks like it barely got a tan.

Meanwhile, modern capsules doing far less show heavy burn marks and ablative damage.

But in 1969?

Everything went smooth as butter, no testing needed.

6. The Astronauts Looked Too Good

They:

  • Changed clothes before exiting
  • Climbed out of the capsule
  • Stepped onto a life raft
  • Boarded a life boat
  • Then got into a helicopter
  • All while waving and smiling

No weakness. No stretchers. No rehab.

Compare that to modern low-orbit astronauts who are dragged off in wheelchairs, pale and barely standing.

7. And Yes—They Admitted the Footage Was Fake

This one kills me.

NASA literally admitted the “footage” of them flying through space, approaching the Moon, and setting up the landing was animation.

They said they had to “recreate it” to fill airtime for the broadcast because they “didn’t have footage of them just going to the Moon.”

Let that sink in:

  • We watched a movie, not a mission.
  • It was animation, not documentation.
  • And people still believe it was a GoPro-style camera strapped to the side of a 1960s spaceship filming live in space.

You ever tried filming inside a moving car at 60mph?

Try 25,000 mph in vacuum and see what that looks like on 16mm film.

Spoiler: It ain’t clean, steady, and Hollywood-lit.

Conclusion: If You Still Believe It, You Haven’t Looked Close Enough

This isn’t about theories. It’s about logistics and physics.

Look at:

  • The equipment list
  • The size of the lander
  • The missing water, oxygen, food
  • The re-entry damage (or lack of it)
  • The glowing, fully-dressed astronauts stepping out like they just got back from vacation
  • The fact that the footage we all grew up watching was literally fake by admission

If any other story had this many holes, you’d laugh it out of the room.

But this one? They turned it into a national religion.

That’s how powerful media and repetition are.

But I don’t pray to false gods.

And I sure as hell don’t believe in Moon missions that couldn’t carry a gallon of water but somehow carried a full production studio and made it back in perfect shape.

Wake up.

—Justin Kerson