And yes, there are for those who look, countless bits and pieces of evidence proving the the Apollo lie. Among these are the images of the missions. Despite the attempts at keeping a lid on what really happened, whistle blowers, "flaunters", and overlooked mistakes have given us a set of photographic anomalies that, if nothing more, prove that all was not right with Apollo.
It would not be until the 30 years after Apollo 11 supposedly landed on the lunar surface that a Nashville filmmaker named Bart Sibrel would have the biggest "smoking gun" of Apollo fall right in his lap. An unknown source inside the Johnson Space Center unwittingly or intentionally sent a "mislabeled" set of twenty Apollo 11 film takes to Sibrel. The film would contain unbelievable revelations about the faked photography behind the moon landings.
And these, for lack of a better word, "weird" events caught on film are to be the subject of a new film I am currently working on with a scheduled release date of late August / early September. In addition, a second film I am releasing is an updated version of We Never Went to the Moon (Bill Kaysing
Audio
Interview), based on an extensive video interview with the late Bill Kaysing. If it were not for the information age, these films would have never been published and made accessible to the public.
Many people have seen the famous shots where the flags of various missions move in a manner as if the wind was blowing them, causing a flapping motion. However, most of these instances are non-events as it were. The flag's movement can often be attributed to the astronaut moving the staff - especially in view of the staff's horizontal support bar.
Recently, all the debate and speculation surrounding this type of flag footage for all practical purposes became a mute point. For an unknown researcher, the work of all those long nights and tedious days paid off through the viewing of countless hours of Apollo film footage. The Apollo 15 lunar surface film archive reveals a scene unlike any other we know of currently.
When Lunar Module crew began their second EVA on the "lunar surface", one of the first orders of business was to plant the flag of the United States of America. As seen in the GIF above, the flag moves completely by itself. No one is touching it. No one is holding the pole. The flag simply waves, independently. Watch the full version - in the videos to the left - by Jarrah White.
Debates have circulated regarding how this anomaly might have happened on the moon's near-vacuum surface, but so far no explanation has sufficed to cover up this blunder. Static electricity has been put forward, along with PLSS venting, and a strange type of lunar "wind". However, these fall short due to the astronaut's distance from the flag and the lack of dust billowing from the surface.
No doubt, much like the attempts to explain the wood duct-taped to the Apollo 15 CSM lunar surface photo, the propagandists' excuses will continue to try to spray perfume on the pig.
For more on the flags on the moon, watch the embedded videos, uploaded and shared for your consideration.