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You're absolutely right on, the truth stinks. I'm just glad I'm the
one that's up-wind of it all. All that the "Bad Astronomer" needs to do, is provide your own superior numbers and/or offer a web page that I can post a link into (NASA moderated pictures of a clumping lunar surface that's reflecting at nearly 50% isn't going to cut it, neither are those terrific still photos of any frail test flight that's not likely as stable nor as reliable as the V-22 Osprey, which can't fly either yet we've got quality stills of it hovering before any crash and even a few movie minutes before it crached while killing everyone onboard, even the latest strike force vertical jet aircraft is unstable at best, that's after throwing every possible level of modern fly-by-wire technology that operating from a bloody cash of nearly CRAY computers that can't miss a single bit out of millions of bits worth of instruction code that we've got invested in the damn thing, which BTW we didn't have back then) so, offer whatever it is that others and myself can compare of whatever it is that you have to stipulate as opposed to my uneducated arguments. In the mean time, I'll continue to read of what others have to say and, I'll even do my best to understand it, even though you seem to have far more ulterior motives at risk than you or I can shake a flaming stick at. In spite of others such as your pretentious club contributing squat worth of specifics, certainly nothing but infomercials on behalf of Club NASA, I believe I'm getting somewhat closer to understanding the harsh environment of Earth L4 or L5, thereby I'm slowly gaining ground upon what Venus L2 may have to offer, so that the following updated page is becoming both "good news" and "bad news". Here's my latest update and, as far as this village idiot can figure, it's become somewhat worse off than I thought, at least the Van Allen zone as representing any significant radiation buffer for Earth simply isn't what the pro-Apollo cults have to say, even though it's a fairly nasty place to spend any amount of time in a craft as ****-poorly shielded as what the Apollo missions had to work with and, don't even mention anything of TRW Space Data, as that's 27 times worse off. http://guthvenus.tripod.com/space-radiation.htm There's been another metric tonne worth of new information that I've learned about the radiation environment at Earth L4/L5, not to mention the greater risk imposed from secondary (X-Ray) dosage that's attributed to solar minimum cosmic radiation interacting with the likes of any shield and/or the lunar surface. This is where the opposition (perhaps that's you) offers somewhat intentional disinformation, as being tossed out like so much warm and fuzzy flak at my position, where actually that's what's been giving me insight and further motivation into learning what's more likely the case than not, like what our atmosphere and of the void or space in between Earth's atmosphere and 590 km has to offer, a factor of roughly 274,000:1 in reducing radiation exposure as opposed to the Van Allen zone attributing another mere 200:1 influx buffer. For some odd reason(s), I was previously under the impression or allusion, as kindly provided by all the pro-NASA as well as pro-Apollo camps, that our Van Allen belts or zones were of the major benefit to our survival, responsible for creating the bulk of Earth's shield, achieving our current level of exposure and, if in fact the Van Allen imposes a mere 200:1 benefit, that's certainly worth the effort, as I'll take 1 mrem/day as opposed to 200 mrem/day any day of the week, month or year, not to mention a lifetime that wouldn't be all that long if we couldn't adapt/evolve into managing with such dosage. Although, that also represents of what's existing beyond the Van Allen zone of death is in fact considerably more irradiated hot and nasty then we've been told, especially the likes of L4/L5 and of the moon itself. BTW; The moon landings are not any hoax, they just weren't manned, because if they were there'd be a whole lot more radiation fogging of film (especially of that thermally roasted and then subfrozen Kodak film) and of measurably but survivable TBI dosage applied to those otherwise radiation proof astronauts and, there'd also have been a lunar SAR/VLA aperture receiving station (robotic) up and running as of decades ago; http://guthvenus.tripod.com/moon-sar.htm Regards, Brad Guth "GUTH Venus" |
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