@@rafanifischer3152 Just ask those who lived in Hawaii during the test. It knocked out their power grid and caused a statewide power outage on a clear nighttime sky.
Unfortunately NASA sucks at documenting things and not very good at keeping up with things and also securing things. There are actual fake shots in with the originals and such. Because they let things get wet, lost things and some things were handed out to press as part of packages for writing stories and articles. So some of it NASA did to themselves. But this is easy to understand. They didn’t think that years later people would think it had been faked. My uncle worked for NASAL So I know it’s not faked, but they where nerdy engineers that thought surly we’d be going to Mars and the moon regularly, not still sitting on earth and not even going back to the moon after the Apollo ended. It was unthinkable to them. Surly man would accomplish this by the year 2000 if not before.
My biggest argument against the moon landings being a hoax is; that the Soviets, who had all the equipment and instrumentation to track and measure what NASA were doing, and a big incentive to expose a hoax landing if it had been, acknowledged them as genuine.
But they will tell you that it is not just USA conspiracy, but all governments of the world, using "fake" space programs to siphon the tax payer money into black fund to control humanity as a whole. Never underestimate the stupidity of conspiracy theorists. You CAN'T provide an argument that they don't have an answer to. You simply cannot.
@@Wustenfuchs109 Yes arguing with fools like playing chess with a pigeon it doesn't matter how masterfully tutored you've been in the theory, how sound your thinking and strategy is, or how good you are at the game in general, the pigeon is always going to knock over the chess pieces, crap on the board and strut around like it won anyway.
Excellent point! Had it been a hoax, the Soviets would have been on that like white on rice. It would have been a major, major propaganda coup. Yet not a peep from the Soviets or, since 1991, the Russians.
Imagine a rival sports team comes to your town and brings some fans. Those fans scream about how your team sucks. You then spend a whole lot of time making charts and graphs etc to explain to them your team does not suck. That is about smart it is trying to reason with moon landing hoax people. They don't really know or care if man landed on the moon. There is no logical argument that will make them change their minds. They are in it for the attention.
I totally did the, "Oh, you believe in the moon?" thing about 8 years ago to a moon landing denier. He backed away from me thinking I was the crazy one. WINNING!
I met Van Allen in the late 90's in Iowa City, he was very nice and at the time he was building a telescope at the university of Iowa. I asked him a ton of Physics questions while I had his attention, I actually originally put together the system they ended up using to turn the telescope. They brought in a expert for Linux I won't mention but he wrote on my workbench as we all watched, drivers for the freaking machine. It was an awesome experience and Van Allen ended up being an amazingly nice person.
I worked in NASA GSFC's Lab for High Energy Astrophysics for many years. The older scientists were nice, but the younger scientists were completely full of themselves. You could almost see their heads swell when some news service interviewed them. Maybe life tempers us as we suffer the occasional failure and terrible personal losses that come with age.
Im more impressed with the Linux expert who came in and just coded a new set of drivers for the contraption. Jk but still it not every day you see something like that...
Thank you so much for putting this video out. It always makes me so angry from people saying they couldn't get through the belts they would die and they're going to have to solve this problem, or they forgot how to solve it. When I remember reading as a kid that they went through the hole at the North Pole to avoid all the radiation. Thanks for looking up the details.
Being a nuclear engineer, you gave a very good explanation about the expected radiation doses and precautions one takes to minimizes any health effects from travel through the belts.
I’m a welder. Just because you’re an engineer doesn’t mean you know anything. Engineers cannot reproduce the Saturn V rocket no matter how much they try. Engineers cannot replicate the skills of tradesmen no matter how much they try
@@howardhughes6212 Your comment has noting to do with what Joe said about radiation and my comment. It takes engineers and tradesmen working together to build anything as complex as rockets. Have a nice day!
Never ceases to amaze me that the more information that is available, the more people tend to favor the false information that fits with their world view over easy-to-check factual data. People would rather FEEL right than actually BE right... facts have somehow become a "matter of opinion". Very sad and hopefully we as a society can move forward from this very concerning trend.
@@NakedProphet _”The moon landings and COVID must be taken by faith, because unfettered scientific investigation is not allowed and much of the original data was deliberately obfuscated.”_ Um, no, pretty sure none of this is true, but go off.
@@NakedProphet Faith? Leave that to the magical sky daddy, science doesn't care if you believe it or not. What makes it hilarious is that you are using a a device with millions of transistors exchanging information at the speed of light around the world. If you were from another planet you say, there is not way this monkeys were using this technology it's fake!!! Thanks to a lot of real smart monkeys you have awesome technologies.
@@NakedProphet There's thousands of papers on covid just look it up on your universities library. Jesus Christ, deliberately obfuscated my ass. You're deliberately too lazy to do actual research.
i was born in 81 so I didnt get the internet until 98 so I too grew up first 16 years without the internet . Life is so different and Im glad I was born when I was to have this perspective.
Never believed it a hoax but was accused of being a conspiracy theorist when I asked how they managed to pass through the Van Allen radiation belts without harm to the astronauts. I was genuinely interested in this answer when I was younger but no one wanted to answer (pre internet) I was not studying science so I never bothered following up on it. Question finally answered 30 years late but still appreciated 🤣😂🤣
What about the camera film as of 30yrs ago film could go threw x-ray machine cos it messed up the film , I believe they went but faked the video , that much radiation would've destroyed the the film 🎥
i find it simply amazing that in the 1920's people could figure out the inner workings of atoms with a pencil and a piece of paper and a whole lot of smarts. everyday life i am surrounded by things i use but have little to no idea how they actual work. keep dropping the knowledge Joe, love the channel and the links you provide and i'll do my best to keep learning in this most exciting time. thanks!
What goes on inside these computer chips is some real wizard level sh1t and when you think about how many things have to happen for this message to get to you and how fast that all takes place.... boom... Mindblown. yet we take it for granted, and we bitch if it stumbles one bit.
Personally, I think the biggest thing pointing to Fake Moon Landing, was the infamous picture of the Lunar Lander where the leg of the lander was covering one of the crosshairs in the corner of the photo
That has been disproven - the crosshairs on the originals were always found to be in front of the image. Even the conspiracy video 'American Moon' aknowledges that, and that documentary is full of lies!
Yes, the retouched photos put the whole mission into being highly suspect. Once it is discovered that someone has been messing with scientific records and data, you can no longer trust the findings, or those who are presenting those findings as “fact”. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof, not doctored shenanigans.
So, I know, I believe, of that photo. If you look at the originals, if it's the one I'm thinking of, there is a very high contrast between the two. Add to the the speed of the film, which has a direct corollation to the sharpness. You have a situation where the light from the object is actually overriding the dark thin line of the crosshair. Think of it a bit like holding a hair in front of your eye, looking at a light bulb. Blur your vision just a tiny bit, and suddenly, the hair "disappeared behind the bulb," even though it's just being washed out by the bright light behind it.
@@FokkeWulfe That might make sense if the crosshairs weren’t etched into the glass contacting the film and designed specifically not to bleed out from overexposure.
This is a true statement. We shot a ballistic tinfoil pod at where we hoped it would be in the time it took to get there, traveling through a hellscape of micrometeorites and deadly lasers from millions of stars
The biggest problem was building a rocket powerful enough to lift their balls. The Apollo astronauts launched knowing that they had a 10% chance of dying during the mission. Five astronauts actually died during the preparations and training for the Apollo missions… Those deaths were the entire reason Aldrin and Armstrong were in the LM that landed on the moon - the guys higher on the list were dead.
Absolutely, you can argue both Apollo 8 and 11 were dangerous to the point of being irresponsible. It's a minor miracle (and testament to the support crews) that they only lost three astronauts in that program.
Driving around with Explorer 1 in your trunk is on the same level than having 50% of the World's Radium reserves in your suitcase while taking the tramway from your institute in Berlin to the Prussian Academy of Science to show it to the king.
In 1969, who was the greatest rival of the USA? The USSR, if they had believed that it was faked, they'd have shouted it from the podium in the UN. They would've been very carefully keeping an eye on the Apollo spacecraft.
Hi Joe, I have my BS in Chemistry from the U of Iowa. If I had taken my physics requirement a year earlier I would have had Dr. Van Allen as my instructor. He insisted that all of the tenured professors occasionally teach undergrad courses in order to keep in touch with all students.
It is very important to have Debunkers and Entertainment made out of these Conspiracys! Sci Man Dan, Professor Dave Explains, Hbomberguy, those people really do epic Work entertaining grealty while debunking. Birds arent real is nice, but youtubers do the REAL WORK, tbh.
I was honored to have known this man and sat with him on occasion having lunch outside on a park bench at One Space Park Redondo Beach Ca. He treated everyone with respect and I have to say I had lunch with him a couple times not knowing who he was.
@@dudeinoakland At first I thought he meant someone in the video, such as the guy who drove Explorer 1 in the trunk of his car. Then I thought "this man" was referring to Joe Scott! Good to know Joe is as nice IRL as he seems in his videos!
Good video, only mistake was saying that doctors don't use CT scans very often. I'm a CT tech and ER doctors order an insane amount of CT scans, most of them completely unnecessary.
@@kikomagana1990 As a cancer survivor I can say that this is not the case at all. I had 4 in one year. One before surgery to guide the surgeon and three afterwards as follow-ups to make sure the cancer stayed away - and these were "with contrast" which means they were accompanied by IV radioactive sugars as markers for potentially cancerous tissue. Technically these were PET scans but the difference between them and CT scans is that PET scans are broader spectrum scans and therefore likely more radiation, not less.
@@protoguyFor cases such as yours its risk vs reward. Yes the level of radiation you are recieving is less than ideal. (Your reciving 12x the radiation in one year of 4 ct scans compared to someone who hasnt had a ct scan in the past year , thats not even taking the contrast dye into account) However one of those ct scans could save your life , it could reveal an early cancer reoccurance that would not have otherwise been apparent until it was too late. As a fellow cancer survivor thats exactly what happened with me , they found an early reoccurance at one of my routine follow up scans. Given a few more months it wouldve grown to a point where it would be terminal.
I’m old enough to remember when computers were only in university labs and secret government facilities. I saw the introduction of electricity to typewriters. Damn, I feel old.
@@gabor6259 introduction of electric type writers made typing faster as the older mechanical ones required quite a lot of force to depress the keys and would jamb if the keys were pressed too quickly. Electric type writers were basically like a computer keyboard attached to a printer and the typing speed improved by about 20+ words p/m.
@@gabor6259 If you look on the internet you can find what old typewriters looked like and how they operated. Then check out how electric ones move keys into position to make letters. The videos will show how they worked much better than I could describe.
Joe, can you do a video on time zones? Specifically, when mankind realized that different locations had different local times, and what caused the creation of time zones?
@@rickkwitkoski1976 ...you know our schools told us a bunch of bullshit right? You seem upset this person doesn't know this part of history, and it's genuinely not their fault that a literal child being taught this shit didn't give a fuck.
Or even better, time zone anomalies. Like the 30 minute timezones in Canada and Australia. How China is all one timezone. And how because Arizona doesn't observe daylight saving, and the Navajo nation crosses over into New Mexico, and the Hopi nation is completely enclosed by the Navajo, for half the year you have an area of -2 enclosed in an area of -1, enclosed in an area of -2.
@@User31129 Modern time zones (yes they are a mess) are due to financial trade and other factors. China being all +8 is so they have perfect trade hours with TW,PH, INDO.
My uncle is a big conspiracy theory believe and he always brings up the van Allen belts. He kept insisting the astronauts would have needed tons of shielding to survive passing through them. When I tried to explain how bremsstrahlung effect works and that, counter intuitively, more shielding would have actually made the radiation WORSE. Yeah I was met with the most blank expression of confusion I've ever seen.
Radiation from cancer treatments exceeds that of the radiation belts, but the system electronics, patient heart pacemakers, the patient are not killed in the exposure, usually.
@@chobai9996 It's the Dunning-Kreuger effect. They learn a few three-syllable words, and they think they're an expert. But they only think so is because they don't know enough to know how lacking their knowledge is.
Not to mention: 13:45 It was designed to take on the strongest solar flare, with special coating, water shielding and special suits, taking the 4000msv down to 350msv. (so it did have tons of shielding)
I usually describe it as like using two two way mirrors for walls instead of glass to block a flashlight being shown into a room. Where, yes, the extra opaqueness blocks some light from entering the room, but then hits the mirrored wall on the opposite side and bounces around the room. Thus illuminating the room (and anyone in it) much more than if you had simply shined the flashlight straight through glass walls.
Lol, "good show old chap". Damn straight. I love you Joe. I look forward to your content every Monday and you never disappoint me. I can't even believe that I watching it for free. I hope everything is going well with you and yours.
The government tested the feasibility of using nukes underground to vaporize the ground to speed up digging and mining operations. I thought they knew about the radiation issues a nuke would leave behind long before using them. So I do not know what they were thinking using nukes to dig would make the dig site uninhabitable.
While it would be difficult to poll, the real question is. "When presented with a crazy conspiracy by a pollster, how likely are you to just lie to them for fun?"
In 1998, A Gallup poll was done with various questions about different conspiracy theories. 6% said the moon landings were a hoax, and 4% more say they were not sure. That seems like big numbers except 26% said Bigfoot was real, and 43% said ghosts were real. 6% said Aliens abduction of people was real, and 2% said they had been abducted personally. Another question asked was did Apollo land on the moon and get kicked off by Aliens who lived there. 7% said yes. Gallup found that about 85% who said the moon landings were fake also said they were real but Aliens had kicked them off. Conclusion: Yea some people are kidding and some are crazy, and probably some are both.
Any low frequency answer is largely explained by trolling, or not paying attention to the question asked, or giving random answers to get through a survey as quickly as possible.
This. Not to mention a fair number of people are just saying they believe in these things to mess with people or like WWE fans who know wrestling is fake but say its real just to drive people up the wall.
@@alexyoon-sungcucina7895 "a fair number of people are just saying they believe in these things to mess with people". Absolutely agree. I just want to point out this applies to both sides of the argument. There are some people aggressively arguing the moon landings were real, often with little knowledge of the real events. Sometimes with false information.
"The outbound and inbound trajectories of the Apollo spacecraft cut through the outer portions of the inner belt and because of their high speed spent only about 15 minutes in traversing the region and less than 2 hours in traversing the much less penetrating radiation in the outer radiation belt. The resulting radiation exposure for the round trip was less than 1% of a fatal dosage - a very minor risk among the far greater other risks of such flights. I made such estimates in the early 1960s and so informed NASA engineers who were planning the Apollo flights. These estimates are still reliable. The recent Fox TV show, which I saw, is an ingenious and entertaining assemblage of nonsense. The claim that radiation exposure during the Apollo missions would have been fatal to the astronauts is only one example of such nonsense." Dr. James A. Van Allen
I'm sorry, the internet became a household thing when I was 17... life was better before the internet. No convenience provided yet by the internet has matched the value of not knowing your neighbors' political views.
5:49 This is hilarious to me, because it's like, "of course the Army won because they had Nazi scientists." -but really, there's so much truth behind the joke.
Response to the beginning of this video: I would like to put forth the observation that pre-internet eras were more susceptible to misinformation than gen Z because "the loudest voices are correct" was how media, and publishing, worked for centuries. If you were famous and in one of the only, limited, positions of power to speak over everyone else back then, everyone had to believe you. And you could always say 'go pick up a book' but that required dropping everything you were doing and scheduling an entire day of going to a physical location like a library just to pick up a book that would be 5, 10, 20, 50 years out of date and no longer accurate, if it was ever remotely considered accurate. Not to mention rumors existed. Remember rumors? Before google could tell you the answer to anything? My little sister grew up in the era of the internet and as a child she legitimately asked me why older people believed so many rumors back in the day, legends and hyperbole. She asked me "why didn't you just google it?" --- Yeah... the uhh.. the google that didn't exist yet. We had no way to clear up rumors or stories before the internet. You had to just try to reason and posit yourself on if they were true or not, or hope one day someone way more capable than you found the answer --- AND THEN that you somehow, some way, found that person's answer. ...Dark times for humanity.
Where you there? I was. You literally had to have proof before you published anything and if it wasn't true it was destroyed unlike the internet, you had more truth until the internet and like the previous commenter said Russia would have been all over a hoax!
Hmmm... I was born in 53, so have experienced pretty much equal amounts of the pre and post- internet world. And I can tell you there was absolutely nothing like the amount of stupidity around then as there is now.
i would say that you'd simply had to settle with "not knowning" which is different from knowing something that is false. It was a slower time for information.
nope, it's far worse now before the media actually had standards, that dropped massively.. these days the media is an absolute joke, if you take any of it seriously then you're a fool education has dropped off a cliff as well which is probably the main driver, critical thinking is exceedingly rare - the proof is again the media, today with it's lowest standard in reporting EVER and yet still profitable they'd be out of business if they carried on this way 20 years ago, they say kids today are the most educated - unfortunately very few bother to ask educated in what? - certainly not to think critically and there is the problem
I came across an interesting observation about conspiracy theories: Scientific theories tend to reach for complexity initially and then simplify as more connections and understandings are reached. Conspiracies get more complicated over time because they have to be adjusted to overcome disproofs. A great example is the sheer nonsense that incels have to invent to "explain" why women wont have sex with them instead of making the realization "it's because you're a jerk".
I was 5 1/2 years old when Sputnik was launched. It was visible overhead and I remember seeing it fly over as a moving star. When I looked down the street in our neighborhood everybody was out on their front lawns watching it. Every house, it made quite an impression at the time. I think people realized at the time that what they were seeing could just as well be an atomic weapon. It must have been frightening. I read recently that what we were seeing was not the satellite but the booster that launched it.
I'm often very intrigued with how the scientists that make these discoveries are able to measure the things that they discover like the Van Allen belts. For instance the tools that they used to measure the particles that make up an atom. Could you do a video on how they go about measuring these things that are so small that we have no way of seeing no matter how powerful a microscope we use?
I went to a Rave once that was called: It's Not A Moon, It's A Bass-Station ... .... it's name has stuck in my head for years now, but never really actually questioned (or understood?) It's Name's Origin ...
i imagine like 1-2k yrs later when kids r tought bout the level tech in the 60s' and then told about the moon landing, they would be like "no waaaay...aliens prolly helped them" like we do when we hear about ancient megastructures...srsly, those guys at nasa were too great
In a couple thousand years archeological digs will discover that we managed to mostly wipe ourselves out through sheer stupidity. Our only contribution to the future of mankind is probably going to be second hand embarrassment. They'll dump the dirt back over any dig sites, find the nearest pub and agree to never speak of our Era again.
The Space Program engineers (everyone of them involved were ) were amazing. So amazing in fact there are things we have no documentation on (Illuminate Doctrine). It pisses me off too. The entire world sat up and took notice. A feat for all mankind!
My partner's father had his name on the lunar lander for making the landing gear circuitry. Or something important like that. I live right by Raytheon and it's weird to think of what was accomplished off the streets of Marine and Aviation.
When my son was a little boy, he asked me one of those ridiculous questions at which children so excel: "Did they have TV when you were a kid, mom?" My answer? "They sure did, and when I was 8 yrs old, I WATCHED THE MOON LANDING ON TV!" I don't know if he truly got the irony in that. But I went on to point out that when MY mother was 12 or 13, her parents got THEIR first TV!
Reminds me that I didn't get my first color TV until the Christmas of '93. I was the only one in our household who didn't have one. I just had a small black and white one. To think I had a Super Nintendo before I had a color TV. Fast forward a few decades, and I just recently purchased my first 4K TV.
One interesting fact I heard about the moon landing was that we didn't have the technology to fake an uninterrupted live stream that long. The moon landing hoax says that the footage was filmed on a sound stage and then edited in post production, which we did have the technology to do, but film was stored on reels that had an upper limit on their length, and switching out the reels resulted in obvious cuts, which were usually done as commercial breaks. But the moon landing was multiple hours of uncut footage with no commercial breaks, and thus could only have been an actual live stream from the moon.
This is the first that I've heard of that scenario. It makes sense to me, though I've never doubted that the moon landings were authentic. Thanks for your post.
There I am, scrolling through endless pages of videos desperately hoping to find something to watch when suddenly; ping new episode from Joe. Thank you Joe…saved my life bra. Awesome awesome awesome as always!
Years ago, I was driving to a job site with someone when I discovered that he believed that the moon landings were a hoax. I thought this was an excellent opportunity to discover how and why someone would think that way. I quickly found out that he wasn't even aware that there had been more than one landing. I realized that I wasn't going to uncover any helpful information from someone so appallingly ignorant and let the subject drop. To this day, as far as I know, he is the only one I've ever met.
Hey Joe! I'm going to be one of the nitpickers this time. In metric, milli (one thousandth) is denoted by a lower case "m", and Mega (one million) is an upper case "M". MSV is one billion times more than mSV.
Flash Gordon did it before NASA and Emporer Ming made the Belts. Now NASA says they can't go to the Moon because they can't shield the crew and the electronics and they lost the technology.
YES! VAN HALEN! Wait… never mind. And I know someone that believes that the moon is a giant piece of paper in the sky. I really REALLY wish I was kidding.
I remember a time when having access to e-mail was touted as an advantage due to "improved communications." I also remember when Kaysing first released his book. It was a main reason I set my sights on an aerospace engineering degree.
One fun fact about the ISRO when we were talking about Ludwig, was that the first rocket parts sent by India to space was transported in the back of a bicycle. Space agencies around the world have humble origins. That is truly awesome.
Hey Joe I'd just like to say .. I love your videos I've been a huge fan ever since my 8th grade teacher used one of your videos to explain some space thing .. your humour is always on point and your information is always well researched and your not afraid to admit your where either wrong or just flat out don't know. Hallmarks of an amazing educator, thank you for filling so many lonely nights and bringing laughs and interest to the saddest times keep up the amazing work -sincerely a random 18 year old from down under Ps. Your Australian accent needs work but it's enough to get the point across.
I just watched the video... and not gonna lie .. I thought the title said Van Halen belts ... so I was waiting for a segway and got confused .. and then I read the title again aha
All this talk of conspiracies and I'm sitting here wondering how a large portion of the world's population still believes in an omnipotent space santa in one form or another.
I miss the days when you could load a satellite in the back of your car. Nowadays they'd have a whole... process... checklists ruin the fun of just winging.
Better off Dead is one of my favorite John Cusack movies!!!! I love that you used that scene at the top of K-12!!!! "Go that way, REALY fast! If something gets in your way... TURN!"
Thanks Joe for this video. Really cool info. And thanks for the shoutout to NASA scientists. My grandfather was one of the many engineers that helped build the Gemini, Mercury and Apollo missions from Marshall Space Center and Cape Canaveral.
@@tommym1966 it's not possible even if they faked it Soviets were like a hawk watching entire us space program they never even claimed its fake as it isnt
Great video as always Joe! I've been to the space museum in Huntsville, Al and it's wild how common, "Let's nuke it!" was the answer. Also, Alan Shepard was a mad lad, he lived such an interesting life. Shame he isn't emulated in modern media.
And an interesting side effect of that is that, the country that has been hit with the most nuclear explosions -- and the one that has been hit with the most nukes from foreign governments -- is the United States! (Fortunately none of those nukes had hit populated centers, although people still died from the fallout of those tests ....)
People seem all too quick to forget....it was MUCH, MUCH WORSE before the internet. FAR more accepted myths, conspiracy theories and misinformation. Nothing could be verified so people believed nonsense their whole lives. Information could be published in A SINGLE BOOK (Encyclopaedia for example) and people would take it as absolute fact, FROM A SINGULAR SOURCE. And all too often that source was influenced by their own political perspective. I appreciate Joe's concern, but really we are far better off now. FAR better off.
Agreed. The only issue being many people can’t be bothered to do research and practice critical thinking. And even fewer are ready to enter a constructive discussion with an open mind.
@@miroslavmilan I know what you mean. Although I'd say those people have always been around. At least those of us willing to learn more have better options now, I guess.
@@CreativeIsolation My own boomer parents still believe "Breakfast is the most important meal of the day", even despite me making it clear that's just a Kelloggs slogan invented to sell cereal.
Last time I argued with a flat earther it was so cringe. So I live in Montenegro small country in Europe by Adriatic Sea, so we have mountains where you can climb and on a sunny day you can see Italy’s coast line. So his point was that we can see ships from a long distance with binoculars. I asked him why then we don’t see Italy with binoculars or even telescope if it’s flat we should be able to watch someone drinking coffee in Italy from our city. He said because atmospheric density , but I got him in the corner because you can see it with naked eye from the mountains, so I asked him why that density is not applied when you’re on mountains. And it just became cringe and he switched the topic, 10 days later I see him and he remained flat earther , there’s nothing you can do, he has that need to believe in it because it makes him feel special. Like ‘oh these poor sheeps they don’t know the truth but I do’ it makes life more interesting I guess
The truth is that is not the case. The vast majority/average gen z'r has a very common IQ level like all other generations. The mean. And no, not related to your feelings. Statistics.
@@jakeq3530 Don't forget that IQ is normalized. The way the test is set up every generation in each country has on average an IQ of 100 because they grade IQ on a curve.
@@jakeq3530 IQ really says nothing about a person's ability to reason. That's all education and experience. IQ is arbitrary anyway, and the whole idea of being an unchangeable metric is bogus, as there are clearly many ways to improve your score through training exercises (or just taking the tests a bunch of time and getting used to them).
I had an ex who used to argue with me about how they couldn’t have landed on the moon because nobody could survive going past the Van Allen Belts. He’s an ex for a reason.
@@uladzimirdarozka3882 yeah he had a lot of problems… the moon landing hoax was actually one of his more coherent beliefs. Plus that dude actually believed in birds 😂 definitely not somebody I need to be around. 😎
@@scarlettsteele7999 urgh, that "birds are real" stuff is just a parrotry, we all know that. Now, I'm going to wear my tin-foil hat to protect myself from the 5G radiation 8)
The Moon Landing was produced by Hollywood! The Government hired Stanley Kubrick to direct the video material. Kubrick agreed and, being the perfectionist, insisted on filming on location.
There are many people that asks who held the camera on the moon to record Neil going down the ladder. I guess people had no idea it is possible to have a camera mounted outside aimed at the ladder knowing it would be historic.
I may be wrong but I feel as tho it's the older generations that believe in conspiracy theories. Perhaps it's because technology moved so fast during their lifetime that they literally can't believe the world they see around them. I wonder how long until the younger generations become this way. Or perhaps they never will be as bad since they grew up in a time of rapid change so they understand that change will continue speeding up. Then it may become an issue of becoming too gullible. Like the quote in Spiderman Homecoming, "You'll see, Peter. People... need to believe. And nowadays, they'll believe anything."
I was just thinking about Jim Lovell being the oldest surviving astronaut. I was curious about the level of radiation he was exposed to as he went to and from the moon twice. This really helped greatly. He’s in his 90’s (I think 95?). Living to your 90’s with no publicly known illness. That’s pretty cool.
Whenever I am feeling angry about the “moon landing was faked” conspiracy I go back to the UA-cam video of Buzz Aldrin punching that guy. Very satisfying.
Joe, Have you seen the documentary “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Moon? It was produced by Bart Sibrel. I know him personally and have seen all the evidence. My entire career has been in science. I studied Mechanical Engineering. I also am degreed in Biology and Chemistry. I have practiced Anesthesia for 27 years. The evidence that we did not go is overwhelming. In addition to the documentary, Bart just released a book called “Moon Man.” It’s a very good read as well.
I am sick of people making up stuff about knowing this person, and having this and that qualification. That documentary has been proven to be deceptive, with footage intentionally left out that shows the premise of them being in low Earth orbit and using a rediculous cutout for the Earth to be false. If you are a medical professional, then I do not know where you learnt to carry out critical thinking, because I would never have someone who can fall for such deception anywhere near me. There is literally no proof the moon landing is fake, and a mountain of evidence that is objective, independent, reproducible and conclusive that we went.
Here are 3 videos that systematically dismantle this sham of a documentary. You can go straight to the 3rd video to see the main deception, but it makes more sense to watch the 2nd one before. I wonder if you still want to gloat that you know this man, who intentionally lied, and here is the indisputable truth. Perhaps you are in good company? ua-cam.com/video/fMrB857Oaxw/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/mYA_g2AJ0fc/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/jghYBAI3i6o/v-deo.html
I'm sure you know plenty about anesthesia, but on this subject, call me when you're degreed in astrophysics and aerospace engineering. This is like trying to lend creditability to a claim about a drug's efficacy by saying you have a degree in historical linguistics.
@@nickrose8733 I’m for genuine science. But the first two video you quote are simply an opinion from a UA-cam. That in its self is not sufficient evidence. I’m a believer that man went to the moon. I have examined the evidence. In my opinion, this was such a massive event in world history and Cold War propaganda, that the Americans did prerecord events in crystal clarity. Some of these prerecorded events were presented as evidence to the public. And some prerecorded was simply recording of training exercises. Equally Stanley Kubrick was brought in to advise on how best to capture the event and present to tv. Equally, jodral bank detected a signal from a Russian craft following the Apollo craft. That Russian craft trailed the USA craft and crash landed. Where I have concerns on, is what they found and saw on the moon, the lack of subsequent visits. Even the Chinese rover has recently shown some anomalies. And why haven’t the Russians landed on the moon. Of course no use being second. But only USA have landed msn on the moon. Russia were very far ahead of USA at the time and the moon mission was to bankrupt the soviets. All interesting stuff.
@@ItsMeScareCro "inverted square law of light"......the what??? Are you perhaps talking about the Inverse Square Law of Radiation??!?!?! Seriously, here is a tip for you. If you are going to discuss Physics with me at least have the slightest clue about what you are talking about.....Take care.
Explorer 1, 2, 3 reminds me of something..... When I first came here, this was all swamp. Everyone said I was daft to build a castle on a swamp, but I built in all the same, just to show them. It sank into the swamp. So I built a second one. That sank into the swamp. So I built a third. That burned down, fell over, then sank into the swamp. But the fourth one stayed up
@@jameshenderson3877 A few other moments... "I'm really sorry your mom exploded, Ricky." "Man, that's a shame, throwing out a perfectly good white boy like that." "I got this recipe from a magazine. It got a little wet and the pages stuck together, but I did my best. It has raisins. You like raisins."
I have spent more time than I should have arguing with conspiracy theorists about this. They are the most stubborn, closed-minded people I've ever encountered. Facts never penetrate their thick skulls. Anyway, Artemis is going to be so cool! I can't wait to see high-res video and photos from the lunar surface. I hope they even do live streams.
Aretmis will fail. It is already obsolete technology. It is NASA working with the old ways of waterfall project development instead of the agile approach Musk uses. Plus you can't devote 2 billion dollars a year to a moon mission and expect to succeed. Must will get there before NASA.
I'd like to know what you're talking about when you're referencing "these more shield in sections' because the command module was the only part of the vehicle that had access to until they were well on their way to the moon. At some point they had to get the lunar lander attached to the front of the command module but that wasn't until they were fairly close to the moon.
Lots of people look at the blueprints of the spacecraft and point out nothing says "radiation shield". While true, everything you can put between you and the source of the radiation shields you to some extent. And when you are are coasting to the moon (or back to Earth), you can simply orient the service module toward the sun. The engine, fuel tanks, water tanks, etc etc provides shielding. This orientation even puts the heat shield of the capture between you and the sun.
lol, oh this one looks great. Love the humor so far. You just showed i’ll be one talking about it not being a moon but a space station. We definitely have a lot of nuttiness concerning the moon. Popcorn in hand continue. Nom nom nom.
"Shields up Scotty!" all of a sudden doesn't sound all that far fetched anymore. If you can keep plasma in with magnetic fields, you can also keep it out ? which would a part of a shielding system. Amazing in depth stuff as always Joe !
On July 20, 1969, I was just shy of 5 years old. I was at my babysitter's house, walking through their living room to go to the bathroom, and her father was watching the TV news with this grainy image on the screen that I only later recognized as the moon landing, and saying something about it all being fake.
Whenever I encounter an avid conspiracy theorists on the internet I just told them that they aren’t real and that they’re just a computer program and the pictures that they have on their profile are just a bunch of computer generated bs. And to see them desperately and angrily prove they are real is hilarious af.
Hi Joe, I'm a fan, thank you!!! Seriously, thank you! AND this is the first video where I was like, "LOVE the music stings and effects!" For what's it's worth, the music content that features a stronger type highhat and kick feel kinda compete with your speaking audio....just being geekish... really appreciate you anyway shape or audio form, Joe
As many have pointed out, the nuclear test in the belts was actually Starfish Prime, not Starship Prime. Much better name actually. :)
first!
Silly man; there's no Starfish in space.... *sips tea and opens latest edition of the Global Flat Earths monthly newsletter...*
Love u joe
@@rafanifischer3152 Just ask those who lived in Hawaii during the test. It knocked out their power grid and caused a statewide power outage on a clear nighttime sky.
Unfortunately NASA sucks at documenting things and not very good at keeping up with things and also securing things. There are actual fake shots in with the originals and such. Because they let things get wet, lost things and some things were handed out to press as part of packages for writing stories and articles. So some of it NASA did to themselves. But this is easy to understand. They didn’t think that years later people would think it had been faked. My uncle worked for NASAL So I know it’s not faked, but they where nerdy engineers that thought surly we’d be going to Mars and the moon regularly, not still sitting on earth and not even going back to the moon after the Apollo ended. It was unthinkable to them. Surly man would accomplish this by the year 2000 if not before.
Most people don't realize that without the Van Allen belts, the Van Allen pants would fall down, thus exposing the moon.
I was going to........ Then I thought "that's too silly, even for here"
Seems I was wrong (😉👍)
🤣
Duuude 1🤣
And, subsequently, Uranus.
@@T-800.. 🤣
My biggest argument against the moon landings being a hoax is; that the Soviets, who had all the equipment and instrumentation to track and measure what NASA were doing, and a big incentive to expose a hoax landing if it had been, acknowledged them as genuine.
But they will tell you that it is not just USA conspiracy, but all governments of the world, using "fake" space programs to siphon the tax payer money into black fund to control humanity as a whole. Never underestimate the stupidity of conspiracy theorists. You CAN'T provide an argument that they don't have an answer to. You simply cannot.
@@Wustenfuchs109 A shity argument anyway. The USSR was an autocratic regime, they didn't need to justify their expendings to the public...
@@Wustenfuchs109 Yes arguing with fools like playing chess with a pigeon it doesn't matter how masterfully tutored you've been in the theory, how sound your thinking and strategy is, or how good you are at the game in general, the pigeon is always going to knock over the chess pieces, crap on the board and strut around like it won anyway.
Excellent point! Had it been a hoax, the Soviets would have been on that like white on rice. It would have been a major, major propaganda coup. Yet not a peep from the Soviets or, since 1991, the Russians.
Imagine a rival sports team comes to your town and brings some fans. Those fans scream about how your team sucks. You then spend a whole lot of time making charts and graphs etc to explain to them your team does not suck. That is about smart it is trying to reason with moon landing hoax people. They don't really know or care if man landed on the moon. There is no logical argument that will make them change their minds. They are in it for the attention.
I totally did the, "Oh, you believe in the moon?" thing about 8 years ago to a moon landing denier. He backed away from me thinking I was the crazy one. WINNING!
You still think the sky is real?
is one of my favourites.
@@MediHusky EVERYONE knows that the Earth isn't real!
@@cxk7127 You still think that's air you're breathing?
@@MediHusky breathing is not real! 😂
It's all a simulation by the lizard people to better understand the impact toasters have on a society, maaaaan.
I met Van Allen in the late 90's in Iowa City, he was very nice and at the time he was building a telescope at the university of Iowa. I asked him a ton of Physics questions while I had his attention, I actually originally put together the system they ended up using to turn the telescope. They brought in a expert for Linux I won't mention but he wrote on my workbench as we all watched, drivers for the freaking machine. It was an awesome experience and Van Allen ended up being an amazingly nice person.
Avery Brooks • hi from a former Iowa City resident. My sister still lives there though.
That's so cool.
@@gabor6259 Seen my comment, Kralik?
I worked in NASA GSFC's Lab for High Energy Astrophysics for many years. The older scientists were nice, but the younger scientists were completely full of themselves. You could almost see their heads swell when some news service interviewed them. Maybe life tempers us as we suffer the occasional failure and terrible personal losses that come with age.
Im more impressed with the Linux expert who came in and just coded a new set of drivers for the contraption. Jk but still it not every day you see something like that...
It's astounding how humans are collectively so smart and so stupid at the same time.
Thank you so much for putting this video out. It always makes me so angry from people saying they couldn't get through the belts they would die and they're going to have to solve this problem, or they forgot how to solve it. When I remember reading as a kid that they went through the hole at the North Pole to avoid all the radiation. Thanks for looking up the details.
Being a nuclear engineer, you gave a very good explanation about the expected radiation doses and precautions one takes to minimizes any health effects from travel through the belts.
Know Veritasium and neil Red?
Paavo (?), I was a bit disturbed by the prefix ”M” instead of ”m” on Sv, otherwise OK.
I’m a welder. Just because you’re an engineer doesn’t mean you know anything. Engineers cannot reproduce the Saturn V rocket no matter how much they try.
Engineers cannot replicate the skills of tradesmen no matter how much they try
@@howardhughes6212 Your comment has noting to do with what Joe said about radiation and my comment. It takes engineers and tradesmen working together to build anything as complex as rockets. Have a nice day!
@@howardhughes6212 please... ua-cam.com/video/HUU3HdxOqZs/v-deo.html
Never ceases to amaze me that the more information that is available, the more people tend to favor the false information that fits with their world view over easy-to-check factual data. People would rather FEEL right than actually BE right... facts have somehow become a "matter of opinion". Very sad and hopefully we as a society can move forward from this very concerning trend.
@@NakedProphet yes I agree with you.
@@NakedProphet
_”The moon landings and COVID must be taken by faith, because unfettered scientific investigation is not allowed and much of the original data was deliberately obfuscated.”_
Um, no, pretty sure none of this is true, but go off.
@@NakedProphet Faith? Leave that to the magical sky daddy, science doesn't care if you believe it or not. What makes it hilarious is that you are using a a device with millions of transistors exchanging information at the speed of light around the world. If you were from another planet you say, there is not way this monkeys were using this technology it's fake!!!
Thanks to a lot of real smart monkeys you have awesome technologies.
@@NakedProphet There's thousands of papers on covid just look it up on your universities library. Jesus Christ, deliberately obfuscated my ass. You're deliberately too lazy to do actual research.
your opinion? ua-cam.com/video/KpuKu3F0BvY/v-deo.html
i was born in 81 so I didnt get the internet until 98 so I too grew up first 16 years without the internet . Life is so different and Im glad I was born when I was to have this perspective.
Same
Never believed it a hoax but was accused of being a conspiracy theorist when I asked how they managed to pass through the Van Allen radiation belts without harm to the astronauts. I was genuinely interested in this answer when I was younger but no one wanted to answer (pre internet) I was not studying science so I never bothered following up on it. Question finally answered 30 years late but still appreciated 🤣😂🤣
What about the camera film as of 30yrs ago film could go threw x-ray machine cos it messed up the film , I believe they went but faked the video , that much radiation would've destroyed the the film 🎥
@@paulrasmussen5933 much easier to shield film than humans
And there was much rejoicing . . . Yay
@@paulrasmussen5933 ....'cuz by 1969 we knew so little about radiation from experiments here on Earth?
@@anotheruser676 🤣yea they only made a nuclear bomb and used it made a nuclear sub and used it but yea they knew nothing about radiation 🤣🤣🤣
i find it simply amazing that in the 1920's people could figure out the inner workings of atoms with a pencil and a piece of paper and a whole lot of smarts. everyday life i am surrounded by things i use but have little to no idea how they actual work. keep dropping the knowledge Joe, love the channel and the links you provide and i'll do my best to keep learning in this most exciting time. thanks!
The fact that I'm using a device 10kx more powerful than computers they used, just to watch stuff on yt blows my mind
What goes on inside these computer chips is some real wizard level sh1t and when you think about how many things have to happen for this message to get to you and how fast that all takes place.... boom... Mindblown. yet we take it for granted, and we bitch if it stumbles one bit.
@@cybersentient4758 And vastly more powerful than that on the Apollo moon spacecraft.
@@CAMacKenzie what kinda tech are they using now
I mean the things abt which we don't know yet
@@cybersentient4758 their technology is now no longer cutting-edge or advance, now they use laptop & iPad.
Personally, I think the biggest thing pointing to Fake Moon Landing, was the infamous picture of the Lunar Lander where the leg of the lander was covering one of the crosshairs in the corner of the photo
What about that hair on a rock? Proves the moon is inhabited by giants with C shaped hairs.
That has been disproven - the crosshairs on the originals were always found to be in front of the image. Even the conspiracy video 'American Moon' aknowledges that, and that documentary is full of lies!
Yes, the retouched photos put the whole mission into being highly suspect. Once it is discovered that someone has been messing with scientific records and data, you can no longer trust the findings, or those who are presenting those findings as “fact”.
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof, not doctored shenanigans.
So, I know, I believe, of that photo. If you look at the originals, if it's the one I'm thinking of, there is a very high contrast between the two. Add to the the speed of the film, which has a direct corollation to the sharpness. You have a situation where the light from the object is actually overriding the dark thin line of the crosshair. Think of it a bit like holding a hair in front of your eye, looking at a light bulb. Blur your vision just a tiny bit, and suddenly, the hair "disappeared behind the bulb," even though it's just being washed out by the bright light behind it.
@@FokkeWulfe That might make sense if the crosshairs weren’t etched into the glass contacting the film and designed specifically not to bleed out from overexposure.
I've always enjoyed the saying/thought that the Apollo astronauts were way more brave than smart, and they were extremely smart.
This is a true statement. We shot a ballistic tinfoil pod at where we hoped it would be in the time it took to get there, traveling through a hellscape of micrometeorites and deadly lasers from millions of stars
@@gormauslander And it was build by the manufacturer who could do it for the least amount of money.
The biggest problem was building a rocket powerful enough to lift their balls.
The Apollo astronauts launched knowing that they had a 10% chance of dying during the mission. Five astronauts actually died during the preparations and training for the Apollo missions…
Those deaths were the entire reason Aldrin and Armstrong were in the LM that landed on the moon - the guys higher on the list were dead.
Absolutely, you can argue both Apollo 8 and 11 were dangerous to the point of being irresponsible. It's a minor miracle (and testament to the support crews) that they only lost three astronauts in that program.
Is that the reason Neil Armstrong was the first human on the Moon? ;-)
Driving around with Explorer 1 in your trunk is on the same level than having 50% of the World's Radium reserves in your suitcase while taking the tramway from your institute in Berlin to the Prussian Academy of Science to show it to the king.
Does the gentleman have a name?
@@MrDoggysmut Otto Hahn.
or spilling 90% of Britain's plutonium supply onto a wooden desk, and having to brun the desk to recover the ash
India once moved a satellite with an oxen-pulled cart
In 1969, who was the greatest rival of the USA?
The USSR, if they had believed that it was faked, they'd have shouted it from the podium in the UN.
They would've been very carefully keeping an eye on the Apollo spacecraft.
Hi Joe, I have my BS in Chemistry from the U of Iowa. If I had taken my physics requirement a year earlier I would have had Dr. Van Allen as my instructor. He insisted that all of the tenured professors occasionally teach undergrad courses in order to keep in touch with all students.
It is very important
to have Debunkers and Entertainment made out of these
Conspiracys! Sci Man Dan, Professor Dave Explains, Hbomberguy, those people really do epic Work
entertaining grealty while
debunking. Birds arent real is nice, but youtubers do the REAL WORK, tbh.
Man, that acronym catches me off-guard sometimes.
@@Vanished_Mostly 🤣
Well. I definitely believe you have a "BS" from Iowa.
I was honored to have known this man and sat with him on occasion having lunch outside on a park bench at One Space Park Redondo Beach Ca. He treated everyone with respect and I have to say I had lunch with him a couple times not knowing who he was.
Who? There were a few names mentioned in the video.
@@dudeinoakland I guess he means Van Allen
@@dudeinoakland At first I thought he meant someone in the video, such as the guy who drove Explorer 1 in the trunk of his car. Then I thought "this man" was referring to Joe Scott! Good to know Joe is as nice IRL as he seems in his videos!
I am so damn sick of needing to explain this in comment threads.
Cut and paste
Good video, only mistake was saying that doctors don't use CT scans very often. I'm a CT tech and ER doctors order an insane amount of CT scans, most of them completely unnecessary.
Follow dat money.
They used them often, but rarely repeat CTs on the same patient. Maybe that’s what he meant?
@@kikomagana1990 As a cancer survivor I can say that this is not the case at all. I had 4 in one year. One before surgery to guide the surgeon and three afterwards as follow-ups to make sure the cancer stayed away - and these were "with contrast" which means they were accompanied by IV radioactive sugars as markers for potentially cancerous tissue. Technically these were PET scans but the difference between them and CT scans is that PET scans are broader spectrum scans and therefore likely more radiation, not less.
I'm a doctor and I need a CT scan on your comment.
@@protoguyFor cases such as yours its risk vs reward. Yes the level of radiation you are recieving is less than ideal. (Your reciving 12x the radiation in one year of 4 ct scans compared to someone who hasnt had a ct scan in the past year , thats not even taking the contrast dye into account)
However one of those ct scans could save your life , it could reveal an early cancer reoccurance that would not have otherwise been apparent until it was too late.
As a fellow cancer survivor thats exactly what happened with me , they found an early reoccurance at one of my routine follow up scans. Given a few more months it wouldve grown to a point where it would be terminal.
I’m old enough to remember when computers were only in university labs and secret government facilities. I saw the introduction of electricity to typewriters.
Damn, I feel old.
I remember when Burger King had a Veal Parmigiana sandwich! Things were better in the old days (the 80's).
Maybe a dumb question but why did typewriters need electricity?
You are old.
@@gabor6259 introduction of electric type writers made typing faster as the older mechanical ones required quite a lot of force to depress the keys and would jamb if the keys were pressed too quickly. Electric type writers were basically like a computer keyboard attached to a printer and the typing speed improved by about 20+ words p/m.
@@gabor6259 If you look on the internet you can find what old typewriters looked like and how they operated. Then check out how electric ones move keys into position to make letters. The videos will show how they worked much better than I could describe.
Joe, can you do a video on time zones? Specifically, when mankind realized that different locations had different local times, and what caused the creation of time zones?
Railroads...
@@rickkwitkoski1976 ...you know our schools told us a bunch of bullshit right? You seem upset this person doesn't know this part of history, and it's genuinely not their fault that a literal child being taught this shit didn't give a fuck.
Or even better, time zone anomalies. Like the 30 minute timezones in Canada and Australia. How China is all one timezone. And how because Arizona doesn't observe daylight saving, and the Navajo nation crosses over into New Mexico, and the Hopi nation is completely enclosed by the Navajo, for half the year you have an area of -2 enclosed in an area of -1, enclosed in an area of -2.
@@User31129 Modern time zones (yes they are a mess) are due to financial trade and other factors. China being all +8 is so they have perfect trade hours with TW,PH, INDO.
My uncle is a big conspiracy theory believe and he always brings up the van Allen belts. He kept insisting the astronauts would have needed tons of shielding to survive passing through them. When I tried to explain how bremsstrahlung effect works and that, counter intuitively, more shielding would have actually made the radiation WORSE.
Yeah I was met with the most blank expression of confusion I've ever seen.
Radiation from cancer treatments exceeds that of the radiation belts, but the system electronics, patient heart pacemakers, the patient are not killed in the exposure, usually.
@@chobai9996 It's the Dunning-Kreuger effect. They learn a few three-syllable words, and they think they're an expert. But they only think so is because they don't know enough to know how lacking their knowledge is.
Not to mention: 13:45
It was designed to take on the strongest solar flare, with special coating, water shielding and special suits, taking the 4000msv down to 350msv. (so it did have tons of shielding)
Ah yes, a fellow braking radiation connesurier.
I usually describe it as like using two two way mirrors for walls instead of glass to block a flashlight being shown into a room. Where, yes, the extra opaqueness blocks some light from entering the room, but then hits the mirrored wall on the opposite side and bounces around the room. Thus illuminating the room (and anyone in it) much more than if you had simply shined the flashlight straight through glass walls.
“They literally just problem solved their way to the moon” 😂 I love that
Great video. All hail the Van Allen Belts for keeping life (and electronics) on earth from getting messed up.
Why are there no conspiracy theorists who believe that the VanAllen belts are actually perfectly harmless? Ah, ha!
@@jh1859 Did you know lost technology from the 1980s used the van Halen belt to cause a sonic 'eruption' wherever needed?
I wonder if Van Allen thought of the merch potential of his discovery and sold "Van Allen Belts" and, maybe, "Van Allen Suspenders"
Lol, "good show old chap". Damn straight.
I love you Joe. I look forward to your content every Monday and you never disappoint me. I can't even believe that I watching it for free. I hope everything is going well with you and yours.
Well done sir on the Better Off Dead clip. That and "where's my two dollars" have been in my lexicon since the mid '80s. Bravo!
So many excellent quotes in that movie.
“It’s got raisins in it….you like raisins. “
I love how you come to that explanation. *heroic music* "Let's nuke it!" Totally the logic going on back then. XDDDDDD
The government tested the feasibility of using nukes underground to vaporize the ground to speed up digging and mining operations. I thought they knew about the radiation issues a nuke would leave behind long before using them. So I do not know what they were thinking using nukes to dig would make the dig site uninhabitable.
While it would be difficult to poll, the real question is. "When presented with a crazy conspiracy by a pollster, how likely are you to just lie to them for fun?"
In 1998, A Gallup poll was done with various questions about different conspiracy theories. 6% said the moon landings were a hoax, and 4% more say they were not sure. That seems like big numbers except 26% said Bigfoot was real, and 43% said ghosts were real. 6% said Aliens abduction of people was real, and 2% said they had been abducted personally.
Another question asked was did Apollo land on the moon and get kicked off by Aliens who lived there. 7% said yes. Gallup found that about 85% who said the moon landings were fake also said they were real but Aliens had kicked them off.
Conclusion: Yea some people are kidding and some are crazy, and probably some are both.
Any low frequency answer is largely explained by trolling, or not paying attention to the question asked, or giving random answers to get through a survey as quickly as possible.
This.
Not to mention a fair number of people are just saying they believe in these things to mess with people or like WWE fans who know wrestling is fake but say its real just to drive people up the wall.
@@alexyoon-sungcucina7895 "a fair number of people are just saying they believe in these things to mess with people". Absolutely agree. I just want to point out this applies to both sides of the argument. There are some people aggressively arguing the moon landings were real, often with little knowledge of the real events. Sometimes with false information.
ua-cam.com/video/KpuKu3F0BvY/v-deo.html
One you left out was that this bothered Van Allen, and he wrote an open letter explaining some of this to the naysayers..
"The outbound and inbound trajectories of the Apollo spacecraft cut through the outer portions of the inner belt and because of their high speed spent only about 15 minutes in traversing the region and less than 2 hours in traversing the much less penetrating radiation in the outer radiation belt. The resulting radiation exposure for the round trip was less than 1% of a fatal dosage - a very minor risk among the far greater other risks of such flights. I made such estimates in the early 1960s and so informed NASA engineers who were planning the Apollo flights. These estimates are still reliable. The recent Fox TV show, which I saw, is an ingenious and entertaining assemblage of nonsense. The claim that radiation exposure during the Apollo missions would have been fatal to the astronauts is only one example of such nonsense." Dr. James A. Van Allen
Thank you, Joe. I always *knew* the birds were up to something.
The owls are not what they seem.
What a nice surprise! Thanks as always for the awesome content Joe 😃
One of the best info docs i have ever seen presented. Well done.
😮 ... 😂
"You merely adopted the internet, I was born into it, molded by it."
I'm sorry, the internet became a household thing when I was 17... life was better before the internet. No convenience provided yet by the internet has matched the value of not knowing your neighbors' political views.
You're a big guy. What would happen if I took down the wifi?
5:49 This is hilarious to me, because it's like, "of course the Army won because they had Nazi scientists."
-but really, there's so much truth behind the joke.
Seriously, your videos never cease to impress me.
Response to the beginning of this video: I would like to put forth the observation that pre-internet eras were more susceptible to misinformation than gen Z because "the loudest voices are correct" was how media, and publishing, worked for centuries. If you were famous and in one of the only, limited, positions of power to speak over everyone else back then, everyone had to believe you. And you could always say 'go pick up a book' but that required dropping everything you were doing and scheduling an entire day of going to a physical location like a library just to pick up a book that would be 5, 10, 20, 50 years out of date and no longer accurate, if it was ever remotely considered accurate.
Not to mention rumors existed. Remember rumors? Before google could tell you the answer to anything? My little sister grew up in the era of the internet and as a child she legitimately asked me why older people believed so many rumors back in the day, legends and hyperbole. She asked me "why didn't you just google it?" --- Yeah... the uhh.. the google that didn't exist yet. We had no way to clear up rumors or stories before the internet. You had to just try to reason and posit yourself on if they were true or not, or hope one day someone way more capable than you found the answer --- AND THEN that you somehow, some way, found that person's answer.
...Dark times for humanity.
Where you there? I was. You literally had to have proof before you published anything and if it wasn't true it was destroyed unlike the internet, you had more truth until the internet and like the previous commenter said Russia would have been all over a hoax!
Hmmm... I was born in 53, so have experienced pretty much equal amounts of the pre and post- internet world. And I can tell you there was absolutely nothing like the amount of stupidity around then as there is now.
i would say that you'd simply had to settle with "not knowning" which is different from knowing something that is false. It was a slower time for information.
nope, it's far worse now
before the media actually had standards, that dropped massively.. these days the media is an absolute joke, if you take any of it seriously then you're a fool
education has dropped off a cliff as well which is probably the main driver, critical thinking is exceedingly rare - the proof is again the media, today with it's lowest standard in reporting EVER and yet still profitable
they'd be out of business if they carried on this way 20 years ago, they say kids today are the most educated - unfortunately very few bother to ask educated in what? - certainly not to think critically and there is the problem
it's not ignorance that's the problem... it's what you THINK you know that's the problem
I came across an interesting observation about conspiracy theories: Scientific theories tend to reach for complexity initially and then simplify as more connections and understandings are reached. Conspiracies get more complicated over time because they have to be adjusted to overcome disproofs. A great example is the sheer nonsense that incels have to invent to "explain" why women wont have sex with them instead of making the realization "it's because you're a jerk".
also identifying as an incel is possibly also a tip?
That's a great observation I'll try to internalise, took a left turn with incel bit tho
@@voodoodolll His projection was too strong
I was 5 1/2 years old when Sputnik was launched. It was visible overhead and I remember seeing it fly over as a moving star. When I looked down the street in our neighborhood everybody was out on their front lawns watching it. Every house, it made quite an impression at the time. I think people realized at the time that what they were seeing could just as well be an atomic weapon. It must have been frightening. I read recently that what we were seeing was not the satellite but the booster that launched it.
Literally waking up to my “Birds aren’t Real” coffee mug to watch Joe!
I want one!
@@chrisfuller1268 I may have made it on my Wife’s Cricut…I’m a big fan of the movement.
I'm often very intrigued with how the scientists that make these discoveries are able to measure the things that they discover like the Van Allen belts. For instance the tools that they used to measure the particles that make up an atom. Could you do a video on how they go about measuring these things that are so small that we have no way of seeing no matter how powerful a microscope we use?
I went to a Rave once that was called: It's Not A Moon, It's A Bass-Station ...
.... it's name has stuck in my head for years now, but never really actually questioned (or understood?) It's Name's Origin ...
i imagine like 1-2k yrs later when kids r tought bout the level tech in the 60s' and then told about the moon landing, they would be like "no waaaay...aliens prolly helped them" like we do when we hear about ancient megastructures...srsly, those guys at nasa were too great
In a couple thousand years archeological digs will discover that we managed to mostly wipe ourselves out through sheer stupidity. Our only contribution to the future of mankind is probably going to be second hand embarrassment. They'll dump the dirt back over any dig sites, find the nearest pub and agree to never speak of our Era again.
The Space Program engineers (everyone of them involved were ) were amazing. So amazing in fact there are things we have no documentation on (Illuminate Doctrine). It pisses me off too. The entire world sat up and took notice. A feat for all mankind!
My partner's father had his name on the lunar lander for making the landing gear circuitry. Or something important like that. I live right by Raytheon and it's weird to think of what was accomplished off the streets of Marine and Aviation.
@@LucyferSkyles that is so cool.
When my son was a little boy, he asked me one of those ridiculous questions at which children so excel: "Did they have TV when you were a kid, mom?" My answer? "They sure did, and when I was 8 yrs old, I WATCHED THE MOON LANDING ON TV!" I don't know if he truly got the irony in that. But I went on to point out that when MY mother was 12 or 13, her parents got THEIR first TV!
Reminds me that I didn't get my first color TV until the Christmas of '93. I was the only one in our household who didn't have one. I just had a small black and white one. To think I had a Super Nintendo before I had a color TV. Fast forward a few decades, and I just recently purchased my first 4K TV.
I can't get enough of anything space related...Thanks Joe Great Video !
Science-fans should maybe watch Atheist-youtubers also.
Its blood-related.
@@nenmaster5218 WTF would I do that ?
Another great Joe Scott video! Thanks again, dude! Loved it :)
One interesting fact I heard about the moon landing was that we didn't have the technology to fake an uninterrupted live stream that long. The moon landing hoax says that the footage was filmed on a sound stage and then edited in post production, which we did have the technology to do, but film was stored on reels that had an upper limit on their length, and switching out the reels resulted in obvious cuts, which were usually done as commercial breaks. But the moon landing was multiple hours of uncut footage with no commercial breaks, and thus could only have been an actual live stream from the moon.
This is the first that I've heard of that scenario. It makes sense to me, though I've never doubted that the moon landings were authentic.
Thanks for your post.
There I am, scrolling through endless pages of videos desperately hoping to find something to watch when suddenly; ping new episode from Joe. Thank you Joe…saved my life bra. Awesome awesome awesome as always!
Struggles of a UA-cam addict.
a life bra sounds terrible. you should take your bra off at the end of the day. give the girls some freedom.
You know what "Moon Hoaxers" need? Col. Aldrin's Percussive Therapy (TM), repeatedly, by all surviving people making us, briefly, interplanetary.
I can't stress more the effectiveness of the CAPT. Totally agree.
🤜
I remember that. It was fantastic! 😂
Years ago, I was driving to a job site with someone when I discovered that he believed that the moon landings were a hoax. I thought this was an excellent opportunity to discover how and why someone would think that way. I quickly found out that he wasn't even aware that there had been more than one landing. I realized that I wasn't going to uncover any helpful information from someone so appallingly ignorant and let the subject drop. To this day, as far as I know, he is the only one I've ever met.
Hey Joe! I'm going to be one of the nitpickers this time. In metric, milli (one thousandth) is denoted by a lower case "m", and Mega (one million) is an upper case "M". MSV is one billion times more than mSV.
Exactly. If it really was MSV as shown (or more correctly MSv) all of those doses would be “mega” fatal.
"Oh, you believe in the moon?" is my new go-to answer when "The Moon Landing Was Faked" thing comes up in conversation. 👍 Thank you for that.
"Oh, you believe in anything? Nothing is real."
I win.
I prefer the XKCD answer that they were faked in a sound studio on Mars.
Flash Gordon did it before NASA and Emporer Ming made the Belts. Now NASA says they can't go to the Moon because they can't shield the crew and the electronics and they lost the technology.
YES! VAN HALEN!
Wait… never mind.
And I know someone that believes that the moon is a giant piece of paper in the sky. I really REALLY wish I was kidding.
😆
Wait.. who put that paper there? Is the one believing this adult? I have so many questions
Go ahead and JUMP!
@@ilarious5729 He was definitely an odd dude. Super great guy but, man, he had some crazy home-schooling that wasn’t very accurate.
I remember a time when having access to e-mail was touted as an advantage due to "improved communications." I also remember when Kaysing first released his book. It was a main reason I set my sights on an aerospace engineering degree.
One fun fact about the ISRO when we were talking about Ludwig, was that the first rocket parts sent by India to space was transported in the back of a bicycle. Space agencies around the world have humble origins. That is truly awesome.
That's because governments don't give space agencies the necessary budget. You got to do whatever is needed to get the job done.
Hey Joe I'd just like to say .. I love your videos I've been a huge fan ever since my 8th grade teacher used one of your videos to explain some space thing .. your humour is always on point and your information is always well researched and your not afraid to admit your where either wrong or just flat out don't know. Hallmarks of an amazing educator, thank you for filling so many lonely nights and bringing laughs and interest to the saddest times keep up the amazing work
-sincerely a random 18 year old from down under
Ps. Your Australian accent needs work but it's enough to get the point across.
what this guy said.
I just watched the video... and not gonna lie .. I thought the title said Van Halen belts ... so I was waiting for a segway and got confused .. and then I read the title again aha
@@dovakarp2943 im stoned and it looks like he is a guy in the other side of monitor talking to me.
Great creator.
4⅗
Well said!
Birds Aren’t Real is a parroty
That's good...
That's damn good.
That's what I thought Joe said - or should have said 😀
Awww now i wish i thought of that.
you won
Valeu!
All this talk of conspiracies and I'm sitting here wondering how a large portion of the world's population still believes in an omnipotent space santa in one form or another.
Thank you for helping me expand my mind Joe🙏🏼
Science-fans should maybe watch Atheist-youtubers also.
Its blood-related.
The moon missions were during the two week lunar day, meaning that the trip and the site were shielded by Earth's magnetic field.
mSv = milliSeiverts
MSv = megaSeiverts
This pedantic comment brought to you by
THAT GUY.
ACKSHUALLY...
Just kidding, thanks for the clarification.
I miss the days when you could load a satellite in the back of your car. Nowadays they'd have a whole... process... checklists ruin the fun of just winging.
Better off Dead is one of my favorite John Cusack movies!!!! I love that you used that scene at the top of K-12!!!! "Go that way, REALY fast! If something gets in your way... TURN!"
Thanks Joe for this video. Really cool info. And thanks for the shoutout to NASA scientists. My grandfather was one of the many engineers that helped build the Gemini, Mercury and Apollo missions from Marshall Space Center and Cape Canaveral.
I love the analogy that the only difference between the cost of faking the moon landings and actually doing it....is the catering
Indeed I always heard it said that it was easier to go to the moon than convincingly fake it.
@@tommym1966 it's not possible even if they faked it Soviets were like a hawk watching entire us space program they never even claimed its fake as it isnt
@@gamingcreatesworlddd2425 you seem to be replying to a point I didn't make.
Don't believe someone when their opening argument is simply saying you're crazy
Great video as always Joe!
I've been to the space museum in Huntsville, Al and it's wild how common, "Let's nuke it!" was the answer. Also, Alan Shepard was a mad lad, he lived such an interesting life. Shame he isn't emulated in modern media.
And an interesting side effect of that is that, the country that has been hit with the most nuclear explosions -- and the one that has been hit with the most nukes from foreign governments -- is the United States!
(Fortunately none of those nukes had hit populated centers, although people still died from the fallout of those tests ....)
People seem all too quick to forget....it was MUCH, MUCH WORSE before the internet.
FAR more accepted myths, conspiracy theories and misinformation. Nothing could be verified so people believed nonsense their whole lives.
Information could be published in A SINGLE BOOK (Encyclopaedia for example) and people would take it as absolute fact, FROM A SINGULAR SOURCE. And all too often that source was influenced by their own political perspective.
I appreciate Joe's concern, but really we are far better off now. FAR better off.
Agreed.
Now we actually have the ability to question everything, all right in the palm of our hand.
Agreed. The only issue being many people can’t be bothered to do research and practice critical thinking. And even fewer are ready to enter a constructive discussion with an open mind.
@@miroslavmilan I know what you mean. Although I'd say those people have always been around. At least those of us willing to learn more have better options now, I guess.
You make a good point. I’d be curious to know what generations are more likely to spread misinformation. My guess would be the boomers.
@@CreativeIsolation My own boomer parents still believe "Breakfast is the most important meal of the day", even despite me making it clear that's just a Kelloggs slogan invented to sell cereal.
Last time I argued with a flat earther it was so cringe.
So I live in Montenegro small country in Europe by Adriatic Sea, so we have mountains where you can climb and on a sunny day you can see Italy’s coast line.
So his point was that we can see ships from a long distance with binoculars.
I asked him why then we don’t see Italy with binoculars or even telescope if it’s flat we should be able to watch someone drinking coffee in Italy from our city.
He said because atmospheric density , but I got him in the corner because you can see it with naked eye from the mountains, so I asked him why that density is not applied when you’re on mountains. And it just became cringe and he switched the topic, 10 days later I see him and he remained flat earther , there’s nothing you can do, he has that need to believe in it because it makes him feel special.
Like ‘oh these poor sheeps they don’t know the truth but I do’ it makes life more interesting I guess
😂😂😂😂
It is easier to shift through misinformation when we are bombarded by information all arounds us. I have huge hopes for us Gen Zs.
The truth is that is not the case. The vast majority/average gen z'r has a very common IQ level like all other generations. The mean.
And no, not related to your feelings. Statistics.
@@jakeq3530 Don't forget that IQ is normalized. The way the test is set up every generation in each country has on average an IQ of 100 because they grade IQ on a curve.
sift =)
@@jakeq3530 IQ really says nothing about a person's ability to reason. That's all education and experience.
IQ is arbitrary anyway, and the whole idea of being an unchangeable metric is bogus, as there are clearly many ways to improve your score through training exercises (or just taking the tests a bunch of time and getting used to them).
I'm not sure I follow. The sheer volume of misinformation out there makes it even more difficult to find the truth.
I met Van Allen once, he taught me the secret to levitation and how to speak fractal, 11/10 great guy
I can hardly wait for JFK Jr to make his reappearance! lol Thanks, Joe!
I had an ex who used to argue with me about how they couldn’t have landed on the moon because nobody could survive going past the Van Allen Belts. He’s an ex for a reason.
Well, apparently, he is the proof that human beings can and do survive without their brain functioning.
@@uladzimirdarozka3882 yeah he had a lot of problems… the moon landing hoax was actually one of his more coherent beliefs. Plus that dude actually believed in birds 😂 definitely not somebody I need to be around. 😎
@@scarlettsteele7999 urgh, that "birds are real" stuff is just a parrotry, we all know that. Now, I'm going to wear my tin-foil hat to protect myself from the 5G radiation 8)
The Moon Landing was produced by Hollywood! The Government hired Stanley Kubrick to direct the video material. Kubrick agreed and, being the perfectionist, insisted on filming on location.
well that explains the actual NASA footage of Dr Strangelove
Lmao 🤣
04:13 "I've seen it brought up in my comments a million different times..." Oh come on Joe! I've told you a billion times not to exagerate! 😅🤣😂
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I used to believe the belt stopped us! Now after your video I feel stupid lol well at least you convinced one person by your explanation 🙏 thank you
There are many people that asks who held the camera on the moon to record Neil going down the ladder. I guess people had no idea it is possible to have a camera mounted outside aimed at the ladder knowing it would be historic.
I may be wrong but I feel as tho it's the older generations that believe in conspiracy theories. Perhaps it's because technology moved so fast during their lifetime that they literally can't believe the world they see around them. I wonder how long until the younger generations become this way. Or perhaps they never will be as bad since they grew up in a time of rapid change so they understand that change will continue speeding up. Then it may become an issue of becoming too gullible. Like the quote in Spiderman Homecoming, "You'll see, Peter. People... need to believe. And nowadays, they'll believe anything."
I was just thinking about Jim Lovell being the oldest surviving astronaut. I was curious about the level of radiation he was exposed to as he went to and from the moon twice. This really helped greatly. He’s in his 90’s (I think 95?). Living to your 90’s with no publicly known illness. That’s pretty cool.
A top shelf human specimin.
Whenever I am feeling angry about the “moon landing was faked” conspiracy I go back to the UA-cam video of Buzz Aldrin punching that guy. Very satisfying.
This guy does a great job at deceiving and making the people who question the narrative look insane 👍👍👍
Insane is a little strong. I'd say emotional. They need the moon missions to be fake more than they know them to be fake.
lol his tone is so condescending but easy to see through it. Then you see the video is sponsored by PropagandaStream and it all makes sense
Joe,
Have you seen the documentary “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Moon? It was produced by Bart Sibrel. I know him personally and have seen all the evidence. My entire career has been in science. I studied Mechanical Engineering. I also am degreed in Biology and Chemistry. I have practiced Anesthesia for 27 years. The evidence that we did not go is overwhelming. In addition to the documentary, Bart just released a book called “Moon Man.” It’s a very good read as well.
I am sick of people making up stuff about knowing this person, and having this and that qualification. That documentary has been proven to be deceptive, with footage intentionally left out that shows the premise of them being in low Earth orbit and using a rediculous cutout for the Earth to be false. If you are a medical professional, then I do not know where you learnt to carry out critical thinking, because I would never have someone who can fall for such deception anywhere near me. There is literally no proof the moon landing is fake, and a mountain of evidence that is objective, independent, reproducible and conclusive that we went.
Here are 3 videos that systematically dismantle this sham of a documentary. You can go straight to the 3rd video to see the main deception, but it makes more sense to watch the 2nd one before. I wonder if you still want to gloat that you know this man, who intentionally lied, and here is the indisputable truth. Perhaps you are in good company?
ua-cam.com/video/fMrB857Oaxw/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/mYA_g2AJ0fc/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/jghYBAI3i6o/v-deo.html
It’s great to know that there are more and people with scientific background who understand that it was a fake
I'm sure you know plenty about anesthesia, but on this subject, call me when you're degreed in astrophysics and aerospace engineering. This is like trying to lend creditability to a claim about a drug's efficacy by saying you have a degree in historical linguistics.
@@nickrose8733 I’m for genuine science. But the first two video you quote are simply an opinion from a UA-cam. That in its self is not sufficient evidence.
I’m a believer that man went to the moon. I have examined the evidence.
In my opinion, this was such a massive event in world history and Cold War propaganda, that the Americans did prerecord events in crystal clarity. Some of these prerecorded events were presented as evidence to the public.
And some prerecorded was simply recording of training exercises.
Equally Stanley Kubrick was brought in to advise on how best to capture the event and present to tv.
Equally, jodral bank detected a signal from a Russian craft following the Apollo craft. That Russian craft trailed the USA craft and crash landed.
Where I have concerns on, is what they found and saw on the moon, the lack of subsequent visits.
Even the Chinese rover has recently shown some anomalies. And why haven’t the Russians landed on the moon. Of course no use being second. But only USA have landed msn on the moon. Russia were very far ahead of USA at the time and the moon mission was to bankrupt the soviets.
All interesting stuff.
If you believe man has walked on the moon, then you better believe I have some ocean front property in Oklahoma for sale right now.
So share your evidence to back up your claim.
@@TheWokeFlatEarthTruth - *laughs in inverted square law of light...
@@ItsMeScareCro "inverted square law of light"......the what??? Are you perhaps talking about the Inverse Square Law of Radiation??!?!?! Seriously, here is a tip for you. If you are going to discuss Physics with me at least have the slightest clue about what you are talking about.....Take care.
This dude is fully vaccinated
& you aren't, presumably...
Good, good...
Gives Darwin a chance...
Oh look another Dunning Kruger in the wild. 😊
Explorer 1, 2, 3 reminds me of something.....
When I first came here, this was all swamp. Everyone said I was daft to build a castle on a swamp, but I built in all the same, just to show them. It sank into the swamp. So I built a second one. That sank into the swamp. So I built a third. That burned down, fell over, then sank into the swamp. But the fourth one stayed up
Lol wait until you here about the early Vanguard satellites, or better yet the Ranger, Luna, and Pioneer programs
"This mountain is pure snow! Do you know what the street value of this mountain is?!?" -- also from "Better Off Dead", thank you for that clip!
“I want my two dollars!”
Excellent movie.
@@jameshenderson3877 A few other moments...
"I'm really sorry your mom exploded, Ricky."
"Man, that's a shame, throwing out a perfectly good white boy like that."
"I got this recipe from a magazine. It got a little wet and the pages stuck together, but I did my best. It has raisins. You like raisins."
NASA has announced their next moon mission will be to say sorry to the aliens living there.
It's called Apollo G.
I watched the moon landing with my Grandma. She said we were sharing a piece of history that I would remember for the rest of my life…she was right.
I have spent more time than I should have arguing with conspiracy theorists about this. They are the most stubborn, closed-minded people I've ever encountered. Facts never penetrate their thick skulls.
Anyway, Artemis is going to be so cool! I can't wait to see high-res video and photos from the lunar surface. I hope they even do live streams.
Aretmis will fail. It is already obsolete technology. It is NASA working with the old ways of waterfall project development instead of the agile approach Musk uses. Plus you can't devote 2 billion dollars a year to a moon mission and expect to succeed. Must will get there before NASA.
@@nickrose8733 I don't get why some people feel compelled to pit Musk/SpaceX against NASA. They're partners, not competitors.
"Van Allen Belts are named after the space scientist James Belts." -Paul Hewitt.
I'd like to know what you're talking about when you're referencing "these more shield in sections' because the command module was the only part of the vehicle that had access to until they were well on their way to the moon. At some point they had to get the lunar lander attached to the front of the command module but that wasn't until they were fairly close to the moon.
Lots of people look at the blueprints of the spacecraft and point out nothing says "radiation shield". While true, everything you can put between you and the source of the radiation shields you to some extent. And when you are are coasting to the moon (or back to Earth), you can simply orient the service module toward the sun. The engine, fuel tanks, water tanks, etc etc provides shielding. This orientation even puts the heat shield of the capture between you and the sun.
lol, oh this one looks great. Love the humor so far. You just showed i’ll be one talking about it not being a moon but a space station. We definitely have a lot of nuttiness concerning the moon. Popcorn in hand continue. Nom nom nom.
"Shields up Scotty!" all of a sudden doesn't sound all that far fetched anymore. If you can keep plasma in with magnetic fields, you can also keep it out ? which would a part of a shielding system. Amazing in depth stuff as always Joe !
7:30 Rocket in that picture is not explorer 1 Joe. Explorer 1 was Launched on a Juno I rocket. That's a Juno II rocket.
On July 20, 1969, I was just shy of 5 years old. I was at my babysitter's house, walking through their living room to go to the bathroom, and her father was watching the TV news with this grainy image on the screen that I only later recognized as the moon landing, and saying something about it all being fake.
Excellent…excellent video. Great historical and comments about conspiracy theories.
Whenever I encounter an avid conspiracy theorists on the internet I just told them that they aren’t real and that they’re just a computer program and the pictures that they have on their profile are just a bunch of computer generated bs. And to see them desperately and angrily prove they are real is hilarious af.
Hi Joe, I'm a fan, thank you!!! Seriously, thank you! AND this is the first video where I was like, "LOVE the music stings and effects!" For what's it's worth, the music content that features a stronger type highhat and kick feel kinda compete with your speaking audio....just being geekish... really appreciate you anyway shape or audio form, Joe