Got the pix in a later post; thanks.

Kinda grossly not-real, isn't it?

James Osbourne Holmes
[email protected]
FTNWO


-----Original Message-----
From:   Marshall Dudley [SMTP:[email protected]]
Sent:   Thursday, July 27, 2000 10:13 AM
To:     [email protected]
Subject:        Re: CS and the meat you eat

 << File: ATT00000.html >> << File: C:windowsTEMPnsmail92.gif >> 
[email protected] wrote:

> In a message dated 7/27/00 10:20:56 AM EST, [email protected] writes:
>
> << Subj:     RE: CS and the meat you eat
>  Date:  7/27/00 10:20:56 AM EST
>  From:  [email protected] (James Osbourne, Holmes)
>  Reply-to:  [email protected] ([email protected])
>  To:    [email protected] ('[email protected]')
>
>  While the moon mission may not have been faked, careful analysis of some of
>  the photographs of some of the missions presents powerful evidence that
>  they were faked.
>
>  James Osbourne Holmes
>  [email protected]
>  FTNWO >>
>
> I saw some moonrock at the Smithsonian Institute that weighed 6X more than it
> did on the moon. So tell me how can they fake THAT? Roger

I don't undertand the question.  Are you saying that it showed 1/6 the weight on
a scale when on the moon?  If so then the scale could easily have a spring in it
6 times as strong.

I agree with James, I don't know if the mission, or missions were faked, but 
some
of the photos were definitely faked.  Like how do you explain the shadows on
this:

[Image]

Marshall



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