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Comments by "" (@maxfan1591) on "Apollo 17 - The Last Men on the Moon | Part 2 | Free Documentary History" video.
Well, no. Listen to the original recordings, and you can hear the pauses before the astronauts reply to Mission Control. This is often edited out for brevity.
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Sorry, but an emoji isn't evidence.
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Sorry, but an emoji isn't evidence.
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Gosh, that's convincing evidence you have there...
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Sorry, but an emoji doesn't count as evidence.
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Would you like to try again, and this time provide some evidence?
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Go to a soccer match at night, take out your camera and take a photograph of the game. Tell us how many stars are visible in the photo.
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Oh look, it's one of Putin's useful idiots.
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"Why don't they go up there today," Because it's freaking expensive, and Congress isn't interested in spending money that way.
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"So this was done over 50 years ago and hasn’t been done since by any Country." Because it's freaking expensive. The expense was justified back in the 1960s because it was part of the Cold War. Maybe you should stop humming and start reading.
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@leelunk8235 "THROUGH THE WEAKER PARTS OF THE BELT IN A SHORT TIME, LMAO" Of course, the Soviets knew about the radiation in the Van Allen Belts, yet they never claimed Apollo was fake. Oh, silly me, I suppose you think the Cold War was fake too.
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What?
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"I mean technology is literally 1000x better." LOL! Calculations please. "Microchips are a million times smaller." That's great! Most of the computers in the Saturn V rocket were in the Instrument Unit, which weighed 2 tons. Even if all that weight was microchips, today's "million times smaller" chips would weigh 2 grams. That would reduce the weight of the Saturn V at liftoff from 2822 tons to 2820 tons, or less than 0.1%.
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Sorry, but emojis are not evidence.
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What's that to do with Apollo 17?
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Do you seriously think this information is hard to find, and that your question is some kind of show-stopper? The rover was stored folded up on the side of the lunar module descent stage. One of the first activities of the astronauts was to deploy it. This was broadcast using the TV camera on Apollo 15, and a copy of that video is on YT, so you can watch how it happened.
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