You guys just aren't very smart. It's fine, I promise not to hold it against you.
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I guess that is just how people think and you can't blame people to be a bit pessimistic. We are lied to at birth with fairy tales and people try to guide us with their beliefs from the time we could listen.
This is almost all of it for me. The government and society lie to you constantly, so sometimes your mind goes to "conspiracy theories" to explain some of the bigger events in the world.
Moreover it's a fine line between healthy suspicion and conspiracy theory. If some people too easily believe every contrary theory they hear, there are an equal amount of people who by default believe the "company line" for everything. It's human nature on both ends.
Probably most of us exist somewhere in the middle.
The only way you can ?believe? or know something is true is by evaluating all the available evidence. But with something so expansive as 9/11 or Moon landing no one person has the expertise or time to single handedly understand all the details.
So we are left using our personal judgment of the publicly available evidence to fill in the gaps. The farther removed you are from a situation the harder it is for your judgment to be sufficient.
If your best friend tells you something, you have a certain familiarity with him to judge whether he is full of shit or not. But how do we apply that same judgment to what the government and a group of experts and scientists tell us? Again, most of us don?t have time or expertise to analyze the qualifications of the entire government/scientific community. So our judgment boils down to trust in the system. We trust people rose to the top of their respective fields because they are talented or smart. We then accept what they say, especially if there are a lot of people with similar qualifications who think the opposite.
It gets tricky when other people, who claim to have the same qualifications disagree! Then who do we believe?
I can?t honestly tell you exactly why I believe certain things and not other things. Can anybody?
Who do you typically believe, and who are you suspicious of? And why?
I like to think I am not just following the crowd, or the most popular beliefs, but isn?t it human nature (and even somewhat smart) to consider the sheer amount of people who believe something in deciding whether you agree. Again, since we can?t figure everything out ourselves, we kinda have to piggy-back our beliefs on others?.
I think so called conspiracy theorists provide a healthy check on the system. I also think people who share the majority opinion on something should be happy there are people constantly questioning things, because that keeps everyone honest, and ultimately makes us all smarter and leads to greater trust in whatever ?truth? is ultimately accepted.
Consider this peculiar fact: in order to reach the surface of the Moon from the surface of the Earth, the Apollo astronauts would have had to travel a minimum of 234,000 miles*. Since the last Apollo flight allegedly returned from the Moon in 1972, the furthest that any astronaut from any country has traveled from the surface of the Earth is about 400 miles. And very few have even gone that far. The primary components of the current U.S. space program ? the space shuttles, the space station, and the Hubble Telescope ? operate at an orbiting altitude of about 200 miles.
(*NASA gives the distance from the center of Earth to the center of the Moon as 239,000 miles. Since the Earth has a radius of about 4,000 miles and the Moon?s radius is roughly 1,000 miles, that leaves a surface-to-surface distance of 234,000 miles. The total distance traveled during the alleged missions, including Earth and Moon orbits, ranged from 622,268 miles for Apollo 13 to 1,484,934 miles for Apollo 17. All on a single tank of gas.)
To briefly recap then, in the twenty-first century, utilizing the most cutting-edge modern technology, the best manned spaceship the U.S. can build will only reach an altitude of 200 miles. But in the 1960s, we built a half-dozen of them that flew almost 1,200 times further into space. And then flew back. And they were able to do that despite the fact that the Saturn V rockets that powered the Apollo flights weighed in at a paltry 3,000 tons, about .004% of the size that the principal designer of those very same Saturn rockets said would be required to actually get to the Moon and back (primarily due to the unfathomably large load of fuel that would be required).
To put that into more Earthly terms, U.S. astronauts today travel no further into space than the distance between the San Fernando Valley and Fresno. The Apollo astronauts, on the other hand, traveled a distance equivalent to circumnavigating the planet around the equator ? nine-and-a-half times! And they did it with roughly the same amount of fuel that it now takes to make that 200 mile journey, which is why I want NASA to build my next car for me. I figure I?ll only have to fill up the tank once and it should last me for the rest of my life.
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Yep......one can believe in some all mighty god and some dude that puts every animal on earth on a boat.
Pray to some man in the sky, yeah ok:lol:
Yep....believe in that bullshit.
But......"man on the moon"....cover up for sure:mj07:
Unreal:facepalm:
Oh and gotta love that math from afkaa......:lol:
The user name of the person who uploaded that video seems familiar: pt1gard
Wasn't that a madjacker?
Interesting pictures, but the conversations in the comments is full of the most immature vitrol I have seen.
I'd be interested in some of the explanations for no tire tracks, but they basically devolve into middle school insults.
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