Thursday, October 8, 2009

NASA preps to shoot the moon


Richard Hoagland a noted author & investigator of space programs around the world said on "Coast To Coast AM" radio program Tuesday night that the moon has been occupied by humans for the past 40 years.
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On Friday morning October 9 at 4:31:19 a.m. PDT, NASA plans to have two spacecraft crash into the lunar surface to dig up some moon dust and search for water. ¶
As it races toward the moon, the Lunar CRater Observing and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) will launch the still-attached upper stage of the Atlas V Centaur rocket to strike the moon first and create a plume of debris that LCROSS will analyze for about four minutes before it gets cratered and creates its own plume. The greatest hope is that scientists will discover water as they search the debris from both impacts. ¶
© 2009The Enterprise Mission
The standard cliché regarding evidence is the so-called "smoking gun"; that one crucial piece which, by itself, clearly "proves the case."

Well, in terms of NASA -- and what they've been hiding on the Moon for over 40 years -- we finally seem to have that piece. ¶

To understand the true dimensions of this startling and very recent development, we have to begin "at the beginning"; we have to start with the launch of NASA's first unmanned return mission to the Moon in over ten years. ¶

Our "smoking gun" -- long before this planned October, 2009 impact -- comes from the LCROSS side of this unique dual mission. ¶
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Richard C. Hoagland is scheduled to be on the Coast to Coast radio show again tomorrow night. The show is aired from 10PM to 2:00AM PDT.¶
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The Senate Judiciary Committee voted 11-8 this afternoon in favor of a bill renewing several Patriot Act authorities set to expire at the end of this year. But the legislation contained fewer civil liberties protections than a Patriot-renewal bill the committee passed four years ago.

Toward the end of the markup session, Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wis.) expressed frustration that members of the panel were caving to pressure from the FBI and the Justice Department.

"We’re not the prosecutor committee…We're the Judiciary Committee," Feingold complained. "The debate appears to be: if any prosecutor's argument is against it or any FBI argument is against it, that’s the end of the debate. I don’t buy it."

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