Did We Really Go to the Moon?
Asking the question is healthy. Here's every famous doubt laid out straight — and what the evidence actually says back. Then you decide.
Questioning narratives responsibly — somewhere between blind faith and blind rejection sits the work of evidence.
“What's the difference between a conspiracy theory and the truth? Usually about six months.”
Asking the question is healthy. Here's every famous doubt laid out straight — and what the evidence actually says back. Then you decide.
The documented facts are so damning you don't have to invent a single thing. The real scandal isn't hidden — it's in the court record, and it's worse than most of the theories.
You don't have to solve the Kennedy assassination to learn its real lesson. Two official US investigations looked at it and reached opposite conclusions — and that, on its own, tells you something.
The internet says they were aliens from a hidden planet who engineered us to mine gold. The Sumerian tablets are real, the gods are real, and there really is a creation myth — but almost everything you've heard comes from one man the experts say made it up.
Before you laugh at anyone who says the government would experiment on its own people — they did. It's called MKUltra, it's declassified, and they tried to burn the evidence.
Two of history's most mythologised names — one real order destroyed by a king who owed it money, one real brotherhood draped in a borrowed legend, and a 'satanic' scandal its own author admitted he made up.
For fifty years, saying you saw one got you laughed out of the room. Then the Pentagon released the videos, set up an office, and admitted it had no idea what they were.
You're right that the news is shaped, slanted, and not the neutral truth it claims to be. But the real machinery is more mundane — and more useful to understand — than any secret cabal.
We have more information than any humans in history, and somehow we're less sure of anything.
Changing your mind in light of better evidence isn't weakness. It's the whole point of having one.
Healthy scepticism and lazy cynicism look similar from a distance. They aren't the same thing.