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Anonymous
>>288857 Actually there are two choices: either those hundreds of thousands of people were involved, or, if they weren't involved then the rockets they built could could take people from the surface of the Earth to the moon and back, safely. (In which case why fake it at all, why not just GO?)
The reason for this split is because the hundreds of thousands of people involved in the manufacture of the rockets would notice if they were building a rocket that couldn't do its job.
They would notice this because they would be looking for flaws and defects in the rockets order to correct them (just like with any other manufacturing process.) So each of the rocket engines had to have worked, the fuel storage tanks, the computers, each stage would have worked, everything. Even the overall design was reviewed over and over again.
Thus, the only logical conclusion is that if the people who made the rockets weren't in the conspiracy then they would have produced a rocket that could take men from the surface of the Earth to the moon and back again, safely.
But if they could build a rocket to safely take people to the moon and back, why bother with faking it at all?
The alternative is that they were all in on the conspiracy, but the probability of hundreds of thousands of people keeping a secret that large is zero, so large groups of them would have already come out already. But they haven't.
Thus believing in a conspiracy leads to a logical contradiction, and is thus wrong.
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