4 claim verifications about National Aeronautics and Space Administration National Aeronautics and Space Administration ×
“The Apollo 11 moon landing in 1969 was staged and did not actually occur as reported.”
The Apollo 11 moon landing in 1969 is one of the most thoroughly documented events in human history. Multiple independent lines of evidence confirm it occurred: returned lunar samples analyzed by scientists worldwide, contemporaneous tracking by international parties (including Cold War adversaries), and later orbital imaging of landing sites by non-NASA space agencies such as Japan's JAXA and India's ISRO. The conspiracy claim relies on logical fallacies — treating motive as proof and ignoring overwhelming corroborating evidence from independent sources.
“The Lunar Gateway space station is not necessary for NASA's Artemis program to achieve its lunar objectives.”
This claim is misleading. While it's true that early Artemis missions (II and III) were designed to proceed without the Lunar Gateway, NASA's own documents call Gateway "essential to the Artemis architecture" for the full campaign. Artemis's stated lunar objectives include establishing a sustained, long-term presence on the Moon — not just a single crewed landing — and Gateway is designated as central to Artemis IV and beyond. The claim cherry-picks a narrow near-term truth and presents it as applying to the entire program.
“Human activity is the primary driver of observed climate change since the mid-20th century.”
This claim is true. The world's leading scientific institutions — including the IPCC, NASA, NOAA, and the National Academies — independently confirm that human greenhouse gas emissions are the primary driver of observed warming since the mid-20th century. Quantitative attribution studies show human activity caused approximately 1.07°C of warming, while natural factors (solar, volcanic) contributed only –0.1°C to +0.1°C. A small number of low-authority dissenting sources exist but provide no peer-reviewed evidence that overturns this conclusion.
“The Apollo 11 mission successfully landed astronauts on the Moon in 1969.”
The Apollo 11 mission definitively landed astronauts on the Moon in July 1969. This is confirmed by extensive contemporaneous NASA documentation, independent institutional records from the Smithsonian and National Archives, and Associated Press footage from the event.