I grew up literally across the street from the Manned Space Center during the Gemini and Apollo programs. I watched thousands of dedicated and talented men and women achieve this historic milestone. We cheered when our neighbor astronauts succeeded, we grieved when our neighbor astronauts were killed in training or Apollo 1. These were real people.
Agreed. My family worked at NASA. I was also neighbors with astronauts. I went to school with the kids of one who died. I drove by the Apollo rocket on the way to school every morning.
It appears that no amount of proof -- or even Q's affirmation -- is good enough to change the minds of doubters, so this is the question I have for them: "If we did land on the moon, what evidence would satisfy you?"
We might know each other, but I won't ask who you are. Two astronauts that died lived on our street (Freeman and Chaffee) and another lived about six blocks down (Bassett). 10 of the 14 men that walked on the moon lived in our little one square mile city across from NASA.
Freeman and Chaffee were before my time. The one whose children I went to school with died on the Challenger. When the shuttle program was restarted, the pilot for the Discovery mission lived on my street.
I lived in the same square mile city as you, but for only a year. I really liked it there. I spent the rest of my childhood in 'Lake.
Just stop it people. We went to the moon.
I grew up literally across the street from the Manned Space Center during the Gemini and Apollo programs. I watched thousands of dedicated and talented men and women achieve this historic milestone. We cheered when our neighbor astronauts succeeded, we grieved when our neighbor astronauts were killed in training or Apollo 1. These were real people.
Agreed. My family worked at NASA. I was also neighbors with astronauts. I went to school with the kids of one who died. I drove by the Apollo rocket on the way to school every morning.
It appears that no amount of proof -- or even Q's affirmation -- is good enough to change the minds of doubters, so this is the question I have for them: "If we did land on the moon, what evidence would satisfy you?"
We might know each other, but I won't ask who you are. Two astronauts that died lived on our street (Freeman and Chaffee) and another lived about six blocks down (Bassett). 10 of the 14 men that walked on the moon lived in our little one square mile city across from NASA.
Freeman and Chaffee were before my time. The one whose children I went to school with died on the Challenger. When the shuttle program was restarted, the pilot for the Discovery mission lived on my street.
I lived in the same square mile city as you, but for only a year. I really liked it there. I spent the rest of my childhood in 'Lake.
Hmmmm…then you would know 12 men walked on the moon, not 14.