onsdag den 14. juni 2017


NASA and the US government gets ready for the next big lie

The trip to MARS


Belive And Not Belive.
There are 2 groups in the world when talking about the Moon Landing. Those who believe in it and those who d`not believe it.

And if you know something about what happened after WW2, then there was something called "Operation Paperclip".


A group of 104 rocket scientists (aerospace engineers) at Fort Bliss, Texas


"Operation Paperclip 
was a secret United States Joint Intelligence Objectives Agency (JIOA) program in which more than 1,600 German scientists, engineers, and technicians (many of whom were formerly registered members of the Nazi Party and some of whom had leadership roles in the Nazi Party), including Wernher von Braun's rocket team, were recruited and brought to the United States for government employment from post-Nazi Germany (after World War II).

The primary purpose for "Operation Paperclip" was for the U.S. to gain a military advantage in the burgeoning Cold War, and later Space Race, between the U.S. and Soviet Union. By comparison, the Soviet Union were even more aggressive in recruiting Germans: during Operation Osoaviakhim, Soviet military units forcibly (at gunpoint) recruited 2,000+ German specialists to the Soviet Union during one night.

By 1947 this evacuation operation had netted an estimated 1,800 technicians and scientists, along with 3,700 family members. Those with special skills or knowledge were taken to detention and interrogation centers, such as one code-named DUSTBIN, to be held and interrogated, in some cases for months.


Several of the scientists were later investigated because of their prior (WW2) history with the Nazi Party.



Georg Rickhey, who came to the United States under Operation Paperclip in 1946, was returned to Germany to stand trial at the Dora Trial in 1947, where he was acquitted.


Arthur Rudolph, under perceived threat of prosecution relating to his connection to the use of forced labor at Mittelwerk, renounced his U.S. citizenship in 1984 and moved to West Germany, which granted him citizenship.

For fifty years, from 1963–2013, the Strughold Award, named after Hubertus Strughold, was the most prestigious award from the Aerospace Medical Association. On October 1, 2013, in the aftermath of a Wall Street Journal article published on December 1, 2012, the Space Medicine Association’s Executive Committee announced that the Space Medicine Association Strughold Award had been retired.

Overall, through its operations to 1990, "Operation Paperclip" imported 1,600 men, as part of the intellectual reparations owed to the United States and the UK, valued at $10 billion in patents and industrial processes.


Wernher von Braun.
Wernher Magnus Maximilian Freiherr von Braun (March 23, 1912 – June 16, 1977) was a German, later American, aerospace engineer and space architect credited with inventing the V-2 rocket for Nazi Germany and the Saturn V for the United States. He was the leading figure in the development of rocket technology in Germany and the father of rocket technology and space science in the United States.

Following World War II, he was secretly moved to the United States, along with about 1,500 other scientists, engineers, and technicians, as part of Operation Paperclip, where he developed the rockets that launched the United States' first space satellite Explorer 1, and the Apollo program manned lunar landings.

Von Braun knew that an Apollo launch would be sold to the world as in a movie. So in 1800 instructors from Hollywood, went to Cape Canaveral, NASA and decorated as it looks today.

The first time that Hollywood stopped everything for a project, and the only reason they did it was because the CIA had promised that if they did it for the CIA, one of their people would become the President of United States. 

And January 20, 1981 – January 20, 1989 became Ronald Wilson Reagan the 40th President of United States.

Richard Nixon.
Nixon was president during all Moon landings, and he was afraid that NASA could not keep what they promised, so Von Braun told Nixon that they were not sure, if they could get the 3 Apollo astronaut's home from the moon.

And an accident now would be a disaster for the United States, when a CIA agent says, "why not film the moon landing here on earth, and if something happens, we'll show the footage here from earth".

But where should the CIA agent say that the recordings for " 2001 A space Odyssey" directed by Stanley Kubrick were about to be completed at MGM-British Studios in Borehamwood, England. The film studio was chosen because it could accommodate the 18 x 36 x 18 meters high backdrop to the moon crater-stage, so they could just use his studio and you know the rest ...

But we will return here later ....


After a nearly decade-long national effort, the United States won the race to land astronauts on the Moon on July 20, 1969, with the flight of Apollo 11. Nixon spoke with Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin during their moonwalk. He called the conversation "the most historic phone call ever made from the White House".


They do not look like any "like the first in the world",
who have visited another planet



Buzz Aldrin, also looked sad, silent, and ashamed at the NASA


One may wonder why Neil Armstrong has never given an interview, after he had been on the Moon.

The first human being ever treats another world. If it were you, you would not tell what you had experienced to all the people you met, I know I would.

But it may be because Apollo 11 Moon Landing took place in London and not on the Moon, as everyone thinks. And that's why Neil Armstrong - Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins look so depressed just before the press conference at NASA.

And that all three crew members quit their jobs a few days after the press conference.?

Who is quiting their job, when you have just completed the greatest task in human history.?


$100 Billion to Land on the Moon.
The US won the race to the Moon because, unlike the Soviet Union, it committed vast resources to a well thought-out "game plan" right from the start. NASA also stuck to that plan despite occasional technical and political problems. The foundation for Apollo's success was laid in 1962-67 when some 500,000 people from 20,000 companies built the spacecraft, Saturn carrier rocket and launch facilities. After this, the program was rapidly dismantled in just five years while the Apollo/Saturn system became operational, achieving President Kennedy's goal in July 1969 when Neil Armstrong became the first man on the Moon.

The elements that comprised the American manned lunar program cost approximately 100 billion dollars in 1994 terms. They were 

A. Manned Earth Orbit:
Project Mercury: which lasted from August 1959 to May 1963. The program was conceived in 1957. Six manned flights.

TOTAL COST: approx. $1.5 billion (all costs figures at 1994 rates).

Gemini Project: started in 1962. Two unmanned, ten manned flights between April 1964 and November 1966, plus seven Gemini-Agena Target Vehicle launchings (five successful).

TOTAL ESTIMATED COST: approx. $1.9 billion
TRUE COST: $5.4 billion.

B. Lunar Probes:
Ranger: (lunar impact/imaging missions). Nine probes (including three fully successful missions) launched between 1961 and 1965.

TOTAL COST: approx. $1 billion.

Surveyor: (lunar soft landing). Contract awarded to Hughes in 1961.

ESTIMATED TOTAL DEVELOPMENT COST
$300 million/1st mission in 1963.
TOTAL COST: $2.8 billion, seven missions in 1966-68 (five successful).

Lunar Orbiter: Program started in 1963.
Five successful missions in 1966-67.

TOTAL COST: approx.$800 million.

C. Launchers:
Atlas and Titan (two converted ICBMs) were used in the Mercury and Gemini programs. The US Air Force's Agena upper stage was modified to serve as a docking target for Gemini, and also provided the 'final push' out of low Earth orbit for the Ranger and Lunar Orbiter probes.

The major non-Apollo/Saturn related project was the Centaur cryogenic upper stage, started in 1959 for use in the Surveyor and Mariner programs. Eight Atlas-Centaur (AC) test flights between May 1962 and April 1966, including six total/partial failures.

EXPECTED COST: less than $1 billion, 1st operational flight in 1961.
TOTAL COST: $4 billion.

Saturn series: Project started in 1960, initially comprising four different launchers (Saturn C1-C4). A fifth heavy-lift variant called 'Saturn C5' (later renamed Saturn V) was chosen for Apollo in late 1961. Ten Saturn I launchings (including four single-stage ballistic tests, three Pegasus satellites) in 1961-65. Nine Saturn-IB missions in 1966-75 (including three Skylab, one Apollo-Soyuz). Thirteen Saturn V launchings in 1967-1973 (including one Skylab).

TOTAL COST (Saturn IB,V): $35 billion.
PEAK FUNDING: $6.7 billion in 1966.

D. The Apollo Spacecraft:
Work began on the Apollo CSM in November 1961, when NASA selected North American as main contractor. Two 'boilerplates' were launched in 1964. Two Block-I CSM prototypes were launched on ballistic test flights in 1966; two more unmanned Block-Is flew on Saturn Vs in 1967/68. Fifteen manned Block-II (lunar orbit) spacecraft were launched in 1968-75, including three Skylab and one Apollo-Soyuz Test Project.

TOTAL COST: $17.5 billion.
PEAK FUNDING: $2.6 billion in 1966.
COST PER SPACECRAFT: $220 million.

The Apollo LM was conceived in June 1962 when NASA decided to use the lunar orbit rendezvous technique rather than land the CSM on the Moon. Grumman won the contract in September 1962. The first unmanned tests took place in Earth orbit in 1968 (Apollo 5, 6). Nine manned LMs were launched in 1969-72.

ESTIMATED COST: $2-3 billion.
TOTAL COST: $11 billion.
PEAK FUNDING: $2 billion in 1967.
COST PER SPACECRAFT: $170 million.

Although not part of the lunar program, the Skylab space station was nevertheless based on surplus Apollo hardware. The Skylab 1 laboratory cost about $7 billion, while the total cost of the three Apollo/Saturn IB flights to the station probably cost approx. $2 billion. Although NASA constructed two Skylabs, it could afford to launch only one of them. Launching the second would have cost only $1.1 billion, plus $1.3 billion for two 2-month Apollo missions in 1974-76.

Total Costs:

TOTAL COST PER APOLLO MISSION:
----------------------------------------------
                       Year   ($M)   (94$M)

Apollo 7       1968   $145     $575
Apollo 8       1968   $310   $1 230
Apollo 9       1969   $340   $1 303
Apollo 10     1969   $350   $1 341
Apollo 11      1969   $355   $1 360
Apollo 12     1970   $375   $1 389
Apollo 13     1970   $375   $1 389
Apollo 14     1971    $400  $1 421
Apollo 15     1971    $445   $1 581
Apollo 16     1972   $445   $1 519
Apollo 17     1972   $450   $1 536
--------------------------------------
                              $3,990 $14,644


NASA'S ANNUAL BUDGET and APOLLO:
-------------------------------------------------------

      Fiscal Apollo Total  %

 Year    (94$B)  (94$B)

1962    $0.78    $5.89       13.31%
1963    $2.91    $10.52     27.66%
1964    $10.33  $20.62   50.08%
1965    $11.47   $28.20   40.67%
1966    $12.57   $28.20  4 4.58%
1967    $11.95   $27.15    44.04%
1968    $10.14  $24.41     41.55%
1969    $7.76    $21.04    36.87%
1970    $6.24    $17.26    36.19%
1971     $3.25    $15.36    21.14%
1972    $2.05    $11.99     17.10%
1973    $0.25    $11.99      2.05%
-----------------------------------
Total   $79.7    $222.6   35.80%



And now, NASA again wants to spend billions of dollars on a new lie. Is it because the computer today has become so good, so it is no problem to make a false landing on Mars, and put 2 to 300 billions dollars in there pocket.

Today, people have not found out to get past The Van Allen Belt, as NASA's own employees, the inventor of the spacecap, even say that once they have found the solution, they can begin their preparations for a Mars mission.

Never 
A
Straight
Answer



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