Alex Penn

660 posts

Alex Penn

Alex Penn

@AlexPenn30

Beigetreten Mart 2022
145 Folgt23 Follower
Alex Penn
Alex Penn@AlexPenn30·
@JasonSeagram @CollinRugg I can visibly see evidence of what is happening by going and watching one of the rockets launch myself
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Collin Rugg
Collin Rugg@CollinRugg·
The Artemis II crew explains to a young viewer why it can be hard to see stars in outer space. Question: "I wonder, do you still see stars in outer space?" Jeremy Hansen: "Yeah, I was actually just talking to my crewmates about that today. I've definitely seen stars in outer space, and I was saying I haven't as many as I thought I would. Reid?" Reid Wiseman: "We have so much illumination from the sun on the moon and the earth right now, it is hard at times to see stars, just like when you walk out in the daytime, you see a blue sky but no stars."
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Duel Nature
Duel Nature@DuelN8r·
@AlexPenn30 @CollinRugg I mean, that's literally not even close to what I said. but nice gaslighting. See I've got all the time in the world over here because I'm an outcaste to society. What's your excuse for shilling for the overlords... LOL
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Stefan Burns
Stefan Burns@StefanBurnsGeo·
Where are all the stars in the NASA Moon photos? It appears a lot of people don't realize the solar irradiance (light) from the Sun is the same at the Moon as it is on Earth. It's not like Earth is the only planet bathed in light. It's BRIGHT in space! If you're not on the darkside of some planet/moon/object, it's daylight 100% of the time, just as bright as daylight on Earth (in Earth's orbit). Go to Venus or Mercury and it's even brighter. Check the settings for the two photos taken by the Artemis II crew here. The photo of the moon has a 1/1000 sec exposure, you're not getting any background stars in that shot. The camera sensor only was open to capturing light for 1 millisecond. Then the dedicated photo of the surrounding stars via the crew utilized a 10 second exposure. Other settings were different too between these two photos such as ISO, but you get the drift.
Stefan Burns tweet mediaStefan Burns tweet media
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Alex Penn
Alex Penn@AlexPenn30·
@PJSTORMCLOUD @jameypricephoto That’s actually not at all what they said lol. The slip up said they were across the country from Maine. It’s crazy that you expect humans to always say exactly what they mean every time without fail
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jameypricephoto
jameypricephoto@jameypricephoto·
I have seen so much AI junk floating around the Internet. Stop sharing it. THIS however, is not AI, or fake, and is spectacular. And yes. Still a sphere, you flat Earth morons.
NASA Artemis@NASAArtemis

Earthset. The Artemis II crew captured this view of an Earthset on April 6, 2026, as they flew around the Moon. The image is reminiscent of the iconic Earthrise image taken by astronaut Bill Anders 58 years earlier as the Apollo 8 crew flew around the Moon.

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Alex Penn
Alex Penn@AlexPenn30·
@GroveStudios7 @jameypricephoto Wait so you’ve been to the moon and know exactly how the lighting works? And have all the resources to prove how the lighting is wrong?
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The School of Elijah
The School of Elijah@GroveStudios7·
@jameypricephoto classic AI junk can't even get the lighting right. Only the indoctrinated true believers would try and defend such a 'photo'
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rfmwguy
rfmwguy@rfmwguy·
@jameypricephoto Decades of observation and reflection. You'll get there...perhaps.
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Alex Penn
Alex Penn@AlexPenn30·
@UselessVerse @CollinRugg So you don’t believe in the science, but you do believe in a random post on Twitter 👍. Whether you believe or not has 0 effect on their paycheck
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Useless Mostly
Useless Mostly@UselessVerse·
@AlexPenn30 @CollinRugg i don't need to believe in anyth of this junk people NEED me to believe in it because their paychecks depend on it unfortunate
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