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In July 2009, Sibrel, who at the time was working as a Nashville taxicab driver, was charged with vandalism when he jumped up and down on the hood of a car owned by a woman with whom he was having a parking dispute. Court documents show he was arrested after the driver refused to pull out of a parking space he wanted. The arresting officer wrote, "A few moments later the parking space in front of the victim opened up and Sibrel drove into it and parked." Sibrel "then walked up to the victim's car and jumped onto the hood, and then jumped up and down several times." The report says he caused $1,431 worth of damage,
after which Sibrel pleaded guilty to vandalism and was placed on probation.
What Sibrel has never been able to refute is that 382 kilos of moon rocks, examined by geochronologists from many countries, have provided irrefutable scientific evidence of their authenticity. To this day, they are being investigated using the most modern equipment and methods.
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The money went to major contractors such as Boeing, North American Aviation, Douglas Aircraft Company, Rocketdyne, Grumman Aircraft Corporation, Jet Propulsion Labs, IBM, Motorola, MIT University and 20,000 other subcontractors. And they paid 400,000 skilled workers for more than 10 years.
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Apollo was a god in Greek mythology, and he was known for a wide range of associations. He was the god of the sun, music, poetry, divination, medicine, and archery, among other things. Apollo was often depicted as a young, athletic, and radiant figure, and he symbolized harmony, order, and reason. So your gut is wrong.
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@VicyLma For over 10 years, Project Apollo involved 400,000 people from major contractors such as Boeing, North American Aviation, Douglas Aircraft Company, Rocketdyne, Grumman Aircraft Corporation, Jet Propulsion Labs, IBM, Motorola, MIT University and 20,000 other subcontractors and even after 55 years, there was not a single whistleblower?
In today's money, the cost was $341 billion. After Apollo 11, there were 5 more landings. Apollo 12 through 17 except 13. After that, there was no urgent reason to go back and NASA's budget was drastically cut. All of the contractors listed shut down their production lines, thus losing the technology to build a new moon rocket. The blueprints and other documents are still preserved.
The 6 missions brought back over 382 kilos of moon rocks that have been studied by scientists from 135 countries.
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400,000 people were involved in the Apollo program working for contractors such as Boeing, North American Aviation, Douglas Aircraft Company, Rocketdyne, Grumman Aircraft Corporation, Jet Propulsion Labs, IBM, Motorola, MIT University and 20,000 other contractors.
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@Sid_XXl In 1969, during a goodwill tour following the Apollo 11 moon landing, the U.S. ambassador to the Netherlands J. William Middendorf II presented a rock to former Dutch Prime Minister Willem Drees. This rock was believed to be a piece of the moon brought back by the astronauts. However, in 2006, during an exhibition, a space expert raised doubts about the authenticity of the rock. Subsequent testing by researchers from Amsterdam’s Free University revealed that the rock was actually a piece of petrified wood. Despite this revelation, the Rijksmuseum, where the rock is kept, decided to retain it as a curiosity and a reminder of the fascinating story.
The Netherlands did receive real moon rocks later. The genuine moon rocks are kept in a natural history museum in the Netherlands. These rocks were part of the goodwill gifts given by the Nixon administration to various countries following the Apollo 11 and Apollo 17 missions. Why the ambassador gave that stone has never been discovered. He probably didn't even know himself. In 1969, Queen Juliana received a number of moon rocks from President Richard Nixon. These rocks were later donated to the Rijksmuseum Boerhaave in Leiden. In addition, the Netherlands received a set of moon rocks from the Apollo 17 mission in 1973. These rocks were donated to 135 countries as part of the so-called ‘Goodwill Rock’ collection.
Luna 16 collected 101 grams (about 3.6 ounces), the 6 Apollo missions collected 382 kilograms (13,474.668 ounces) of lunar samples.
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