Indian and Chinese orbiting telescopes have resolved Apollo debris (LM descent stages, six of 'em, about 33 feet across) left on the moon. The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter has photographed them from lunar orbit. The debris cannot be seen by terrestrial telescopes because... physics. The atmosphere, constantly in motion, disturbs the resolution of the telescopes. The objects are too far away and too small to be seen.
Believe what you want to believe but that doesn't change facts.
Indian and Chinese orbiting telescopes have resolved Apollo debris (LM descent stages, six of 'em, about 33 feet across) left on the moon. The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter has photographed them from lunar orbit. The debris cannot be seen by terrestrial telescopes because... physics. The atmosphere, constantly in motion, disturbs the resolution of the telescopes. The objects are too far away and too small to be seen.
Believe what you want to believe but that doesn't change facts.
And the atmosphere gets in the way.... . . .
(that's the limiting factor for satellites that can read your license plates)
...but wait