This is seriously considered "evidence"? wrote:
OK, I actually went (against my better judgement) to your so-called "Wikipedia" proofs page.
I didn't bother reading the stuff, just to look at the sources cited.
ALMOST NONE OF THEM WERE ARE ACTUALLY PEER-REVIEWED SCIENTIFIC LITERATURE!!!
Source #26: Lunar Samples (Geochemistry journal)
Source #28: More chemical rock/soil sources.
Source #37: Lunar Laser Ranging Experiment, Science, 1973
Source #39: more on laser ranging, conference proceedings, but looks more respectable than some
Out of 55 sources, hardly ANY of them are actually scientific peer-reviewed papers!!
The ones that do involve moon rocks/soil (and one of them was 25 years after the fact, published 1998), but doesn't even discuss if the "Lunar Samples" could be obtained by *unmanned* moon missions (for example). So they are proof that *moon rocks* exist, not that USA astronauts ever personally landed on Earth's Moon!
Similarly, the science of laser reflection is nice perhaps, but doesn't say how the reflectors were implanted there in the first place. I'm pretty sure you could do it w/o extraneously (at high cost and risk) sending a man to moon.
And this is the best the anti-hoaxers have? How telling....
You have to wonder why they even bother to make all these amateur links, but most ppl aren't smart and careful readers when it comes from a "trusted source" like Wikipedia (or even worse, Google search), so believe whatever is claimed because a random link says so. Not the way I was taught to treat science.