2018-04-11

Luis Leon - Tau [Chapter 24]



you know, the thing you have to understand about official stories is they are just that take for example all of NASA's data, we have only their word for it, that it is genuine, and if they wanted to and they do, deceive the masses into thinking they had received something of value, for all their money, then they would be happy to keep on paying, think of it like a firework display, except it cost billions, for a few oooohs and ahhhhh, (mainly from NASA employees and paid stooges in the audiences when information is presented like the, "Tau", (TAU Thousand Astronomical Units, was a proposed unmanned space probe that would go to a distance of one thousand astronomical units 1000 AU from the Earth and Sun by NASA/JPL in 1987 using tested technology. One scientific purpose would be to measure the distance to other stars via stellar parallax. Studies continued into 1990, working with a launch in the 2005–2010 time-frame). It was a proposed nuclear electric rocket spacecraft that used a 1 MW fission reactor and an ion drive (with a burn time of about 10 years) to reach a distance of 1000 AU in 50 years. The primary goal of the mission was to improve parallax measurements of the distances to stars inside and outside the Milky Way, with secondary goals being the study of the heliopause, measurements of conditions in the interstellar medium, and (via communications with Earth) tests of general relativity. One of the tasks envisioned for TAU would be a flyby of Pluto. A Pluto flyby was achieved in 2015 by the New Frontiers program mission New Horizons. Some of the instruments proposed for the design included a 1.5-meter telescope for observations and a 1-meter telescope for laser communication with Earth. After launch it would accelerate to about 106 km/s about 22.4 AU/year) over 10 years, using xenon as propellant and a nuclear fission reactor for power, Since the end of the Apollo program in 1972 NASA has operated with an average 0.5 percent of the total US budget. That’s not even a percent of the total 3 trillion dollars allocated to the U.S. in 2014. Although that may still seem like a lot of money, let’s compare it to the beginning of the Apollo program. In 1961, President John F. Kennedy decided that NASA would send humans to the Moon before the end of the decade. At that time, each U.S. citizen was paying $20 per year to NASA. JFK needed that number to go up to $26 a year to help get our astronauts to the Moon. In 2015 dollars, the Apollo era budget would have been equivalent to each American paying over $200 a year to the space administration. If NASA still had that sort of funding in 2015, that would make its budget a whopping $65 billion dollars per year, compared to its actual budget of $17.5 billion. Instead, in 2014 each American paid an average of $54 per year to NASA.and i bet  you didn't know that, they havnt sent anything that can be independently verified, and they do their utmost to suppress true lunar images and space telemetry and real evidence, it's time for the peep's to rise as, standardz, hahahahahahahahahahaha, :) #edio

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