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Old March 11th 07, 04:34 PM posted to sci.space.history,soc.culture.usa,sci.physics,alt.usenet.kooks,alt.astronomy
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Default Apollo moon landings : why is this Mailgate banished?

On Mar 11, 5:24 am, "Kadaitcha Man" wrote:
Brad Guth Thou mad master. Thou son of darkness.
Thou hasty-witted demi-wolf. Thou pernicious disobedient wretch. Ye
flared and ye excoriated:

"Brad Guth" wrote in message
news:d3c84b3e10a8bdd3c68ad468c2ddcc7a.49644@mygat e.mailgate.org


http://www.erichufschmid.net/Intervi...rt-Sibrel.html


Downlaod this mp3 :
http://www.erichufschmid.net/Intervi...-14Sep2006.mp3


Like millions of people around the world, Bart Sibrel was fascinated
with the Apollo moon landing when he was a child. The walls of his
bedroom were filled with pictures of the Apollo moon landing.


Whilst the bedroom walls of all other males the world over were plastered
with pictures of a half-naked Twiggy, Gina Lollobrigida's tits on One
Million Years B.C. posters, and magaizine cut-outs of Kim Novak's gartered
thighs.

You aren't from Missouri, are you. ... eh.

( If required, ...
... to marshal further contextual McLuism, see http://tinyurl.com/357j7f
)


Inquiring minds want to know.
From Wikipedia ....


See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_...ax_accusations

[Quoting ...]

Opinion polls

A year after the first moon landing, Knight Newspapers conducted a
poll of 1721 U.S. citizens and found that more than 30 percent of the
all of the poll's respondents were "suspicious of NASA's trips to the
Moon" with the number rising to over half in some demographic areas.
The Newsweek article that published the poll results noted that among
the respondents were "an elderly Philadelphia woman who thought the
moon landing had been staged in an Arizona desert" and a "housewife"
whose suspicions were based on her belief that her television could
not "receive signals from the moon." Another respondent said, "It's
all a deliberate effort to mask problems at home . . . the people are
unhappy - and this takes their minds off their problems." [12]

According to a 1999 Gallup poll, about 6 percent of the population of
the United States has doubts that the Apollo astronauts walked on the
Moon. (Five percent had no opinion, while 89 percent believed the
landings took place.)[1] It asked, "thinking about the space
exploration, do you think the government staged or faked the Apollo
Moon landing, or don't you feel that way?" Six percent of respondents
answered "yes, staged."[13],[14], p. 156 "Although, if taken
literally, 6 percent translates into millions of individuals," Gallup
said of this, "it is not unusual to find about that many people in the
typical poll agreeing with almost any question that is asked of them;
so the best interpretation is that this particular conspiracy theory
is not widespread." A 1995 Time/CNN poll also found that 6 percent of
the people believe in a hoax[14], p. 156. Fox television's 2001 TV
special "Conspiracy Theory: Did We Really Land on the Moon?", airing
to 15 million viewers,[citation needed] may have given a boost to the
idea, despite the allegation of many errors of fact and presentation
in the program by the Web site called "Who mourns for Apollo?".[15]
Fox said roughly 20 percent of the public had doubts about the
authenticity of the Apollo program after the show.[citation
needed] ...