The book "Moon Man: The True Story of a Filmmaker on the CIA Hit List" is a memoir of the deathbed confession of the former Chief of Security at Cannon Air Force Base in Clovis New Mexico, who confessed to his regrettable participation in the fabrication of the first "moon landing". His identity is finally revealed. This predetermined waiting period was previously negotiated with his sole surviving son, who himself passed away this year. Cyrus Eugene Akers detailed the information in the book, including not only the location of the filming of the first fake moon landing at his military base, the dates it was filmed, and the CIA code-name for the operation, he also gave the names of 15 government scientists and officials who were allowed exclusive observation of this historic government fraud, some of whom are still alive today. The list was given to Akers by President Lyndon Johnson, who was there at the first day of filming. Threatened with execution if he ever revealed this information, Security Chief Akers kept all of this to himself until his deathbed, the guilt from which prompted his tearful confession to his son, who was also threatened with assassination after sharing this information with the author of Moon Man, Bart Sibrel.
“It's easier to fool people than to convince them that they have been fooled.” ― Mark Twain
This sad and outrageous deception was done for political reasons, to bolster national pride and financial profit. Unlike government frauds about war, assassination, or terrorism, the moon landing deception was especially cruel in that it gave an over-trusting public the performance of a lifetime that they wished for. Exposing their heroes as the actors and fakes would face fierce resistance and disbelief. Even a professor at a major university has so famously said, "Even if I heard a moon astronaut confess that he never really went, I would still believe that he walked on the moon."
The author of "Moon Man", Bart Sibrel grew up as a devout supporter of the supposed Moon landings, yet over the years, gradually began to recognize their unfortunate falsification. In Sibrel’s mind, the claim that astronauts walked on the moon on the very first attempt with antiquated untried 1960s technology, when today with five decades of more advanced technology the US can only send astronauts one-thousandth the distance to the Moon, simply defies logic. Sibrel is convinced that until the Moon landing fraud is exposed, the governments of the world will continue deceiving the people under their care until their eventual demise.
Bart Sibrel is an award-winning filmmaker, writer, and investigative journalist, who has produced television programs and documentaries for over 35 years. He has been employed by two of the three major US networks, worked as a television news reporter, and has produced segments for ABC, NBC, and CBS. Sibrel regularly speaks as a guest commentator regarding the Moon landing fraud, and has appeared as such on NBC, FOX, CNN, and HBO to discuss his films "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Moon" and "Astronauts Gone Wild".
In Sibrel’s mind, the claim that astronauts walked on the moon on the very first attempt with antiquated untried 1960s technology,
This is just patently absurd logic. The development of the SR-71 Blackbird, a high-altitude reconnaissance aircraft, began in the mid-1950s. The plane made its first flight on December 22, 1964.
The only reason to go into space is to get into orbit. Putting something into orbit is only possible or useful or feasible once you are fully outside of the Earth's atmosphere. That's it. That happens to be about 220 MI hi, just a few hours drive if you could drive straight up. That's it. There's no reason to be at 250 miles or 300 miles. The further you go, the less useful your satellite is because it's farther and farther away from earth. You're just wasting fuel. It doesn't really matter if the moon is $238,000 MI away, once you get out of Earth's orbit, you can float for as long as you've got food and water in the capsule, basically. There's no such thing as distance in space, there's only duration in terms of floating to your next objective.
the US can only send astronauts one-thousandth the distance to the Moon
Son, you truly don't understand how rockets get to orbit. Measuring things by "distance away" is irrelevant.
This is incredibly ignorant reasoning, man. Weak, weak stuff.
The book "Moon Man: The True Story of a Filmmaker on the CIA Hit List" is a memoir of the deathbed confession of the former Chief of Security at Cannon Air Force Base in Clovis New Mexico, who confessed to his regrettable participation in the fabrication of the first "moon landing". His identity is finally revealed. This predetermined waiting period was previously negotiated with his sole surviving son, who himself passed away this year. Cyrus Eugene Akers detailed the information in the book, including not only the location of the filming of the first fake moon landing at his military base, the dates it was filmed, and the CIA code-name for the operation, he also gave the names of 15 government scientists and officials who were allowed exclusive observation of this historic government fraud, some of whom are still alive today. The list was given to Akers by President Lyndon Johnson, who was there at the first day of filming. Threatened with execution if he ever revealed this information, Security Chief Akers kept all of this to himself until his deathbed, the guilt from which prompted his tearful confession to his son, who was also threatened with assassination after sharing this information with the author of Moon Man, Bart Sibrel.
This sad and outrageous deception was done for political reasons, to bolster national pride and financial profit. Unlike government frauds about war, assassination, or terrorism, the moon landing deception was especially cruel in that it gave an over-trusting public the performance of a lifetime that they wished for. Exposing their heroes as the actors and fakes would face fierce resistance and disbelief. Even a professor at a major university has so famously said, "Even if I heard a moon astronaut confess that he never really went, I would still believe that he walked on the moon."
The author of "Moon Man", Bart Sibrel grew up as a devout supporter of the supposed Moon landings, yet over the years, gradually began to recognize their unfortunate falsification. In Sibrel’s mind, the claim that astronauts walked on the moon on the very first attempt with antiquated untried 1960s technology, when today with five decades of more advanced technology the US can only send astronauts one-thousandth the distance to the Moon, simply defies logic. Sibrel is convinced that until the Moon landing fraud is exposed, the governments of the world will continue deceiving the people under their care until their eventual demise.
Bart Sibrel is an award-winning filmmaker, writer, and investigative journalist, who has produced television programs and documentaries for over 35 years. He has been employed by two of the three major US networks, worked as a television news reporter, and has produced segments for ABC, NBC, and CBS. Sibrel regularly speaks as a guest commentator regarding the Moon landing fraud, and has appeared as such on NBC, FOX, CNN, and HBO to discuss his films "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Moon" and "Astronauts Gone Wild".
This is just patently absurd logic. The development of the SR-71 Blackbird, a high-altitude reconnaissance aircraft, began in the mid-1950s. The plane made its first flight on December 22, 1964.
The only reason to go into space is to get into orbit. Putting something into orbit is only possible or useful or feasible once you are fully outside of the Earth's atmosphere. That's it. That happens to be about 220 MI hi, just a few hours drive if you could drive straight up. That's it. There's no reason to be at 250 miles or 300 miles. The further you go, the less useful your satellite is because it's farther and farther away from earth. You're just wasting fuel. It doesn't really matter if the moon is $238,000 MI away, once you get out of Earth's orbit, you can float for as long as you've got food and water in the capsule, basically. There's no such thing as distance in space, there's only duration in terms of floating to your next objective.
Son, you truly don't understand how rockets get to orbit. Measuring things by "distance away" is irrelevant.
This is incredibly ignorant reasoning, man. Weak, weak stuff.