Tom Seversike - Writer
Conspiracy Theories are so fun to talk about. So for the three people that read this article, I have brought together two of my favorites and I will give my needed and wanted opinion. First, faked moon landing. A guy named Bill Kaysing did two things of note. One, he started the theory that the moon landing was fake. Two, it gave me the idea to put muzzles on ducks. Get it? Bill Casing? I hate myself. His doubts started when he was thinking about how it didn’t seem that NASA had the technological capabilities. I think this is an odd reason because it’s not like NASA is just handing out documents declaring what they can and cannot do. This was during the space race and they couldn’t let the commies know what they were capable of doing or not doing. In his defense, though, he probably knew a good deal more than other people at the time because he worked Rocketdyne. This helped in the design of the Saturn V rocket engine, and sounded like an evil corporation from a comic book. In 1976, he made a pamphlet, called “We Never Went to the Moon: America’s Thirty Billion Dollar Swindle.” Despite how crazy and low-quality the pamphlet was, people read it and listened to him. Some people still believe him to this day, and you can see for yourself if you want to risk your health and go on Reddit. Despite a lot of evidence such as visible footprints and a rock from the moon, many people believe the moon landing was a lie. I think it’s hilarious if it was fake and the moon rock is just from Montana or something and now for the first time, something from Montana is exciting. In the next one, I would like to take a gander at is the whole 5G will kill us all thing. People started fearing Electromagnetic waves more in 1979 when a study came out suggesting that children who lived near power lines were more likely to develop cancer. And since this was around the Cold War, people were scared of radiation and the cancer or the communism it might give you. (I apologize for the communism jokes, I promise I’m not that lazy or unfunny in person) This caused people to begin fearing other household items such as hair dryers or microwaves. And the people who were afraid of the waves a hair dryer emits aren’t the biggest fan of cellphones, tiny radiation boxes in your pocket, giving you cancer and convenience. With the new 5G, along with its aggressive advertising and release similar to the time the pandemic started, has people quaking in their boots. The most obvious thing to say to people who believe this is this: What do people who provide 5G have to gain from dying customers and a plummeting economy? And WHO has conducted many studies that there aren’t health risks from low level EM waves? But if these were rational, well informed people this wouldn’t be a problem so we can just sit there and laugh at them I guess. In conclusion, I don’t know, be smart. https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2020/05/great-5g-conspiracy/611317/ https://www.theguardian.com/science/2019/jul/10/one-giant-lie-why-so-many-people-still-think-the-moon-landings-were-faked
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