• 3 months ago
The problem is there is no open equal discussion. If a truth is unknown it usually falls in the middle until more likely than not the needle moves closer to true or false. NASA tells different stories compounding the problem. NASA astronauts have told us for decades you cannot see the stars, then a clever question comes their way and 2 astronauts state you can always see the stars. NASA's Big Lie: You can't see stars in space...
Transcript
00:00Willst, from Mark Cameron, this is from Mark Cameron.
00:15Willst, in space, have you ever looked away from Earth into the black void?
00:21Yeah.
00:22Yeah, all the time.
00:25Yeah, because you can see the stars.
00:27Oh, yeah.
00:28And pretty much all the time you can see the stars.
00:38We were never able to see stars from the lunar surface or on the daylight side of the moon.
00:44The sky is deep black when viewed from the moon as it is when viewed from cislunar space,
00:58the space between the Earth and the moon.
01:00And we cannot see stars.
01:02It's not a black void.
01:03It's a cool thing.
01:04I mean, it's black, but there's all kinds of little polka dots.
01:06There's all the stars there.
01:07And the cool thing is, by the way, you can see it during the day.
01:09And when you're in space and you're looking into deep space and you're on the sun side of the orbit,
01:14the sunlight washes out all the starlight, so you can't see any stars, just like here on Earth.
01:18There's all the stars there.
01:19And the cool thing is, by the way, you can see it during the day.
01:25Yeah, you can.
01:26And there's more than stars.
01:27You can see planets.
01:29You can see moons.
01:30You see the gas magellanic clouds of the Milky Way galaxy.
01:35Yeah, you see the magellanic clouds.
01:40The sunlight washes out all the starlight, so you can't see any stars, just like here on Earth.
01:47Pretty much all the time, you can see the stars.
01:49Then when you look out into deep space away from the sun, it's the darkest black you can imagine.
01:54Just the inherent beauty of it, the velvet, bottomless bucket of the universe.
02:00And like, just hanging there in a vast sea of darkness, and the most frightening darkness that you could ever imagine.
02:07Pretty much all the time, you can see the stars.
02:09From Mark Cameron. This is from Mark Cameron.
02:11Whilst in space, have you ever looked away from Earth into the black void?
02:17And the most frightening darkness that you could ever imagine.
02:23Pretty much all the time, you can see the stars.
02:28The sky, of course, was black, but it had sort of a velvet sheen to it.
02:35The biggest visual surprise was just how black the sky was.
02:40You have a brilliant sun, brighter than any sun you normally would see even here in New Mexico.
02:45You have these extraordinarily high mountains.
02:49We were in a valley deeper than the Grand Canyon.
02:52But then you have this black sky, a sky blacker than black, as the old Vitican expression used to be.
02:59There's all the stars there, and the cool thing is you can see it during the day.
03:03I've often tried to explain the difference between darkness, when you turn out the lights and it's dark in here, or blackness.
03:11Blackness is the endlessness of it all. It's hard to comprehend.
03:21Pretty much all the time, you can see the stars.
03:24We don't need no badges. I don't have to show you any stinking badges.

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