YourNewsWire... 28 Comments Former NASA contractor Cyndi Holland says she found proof that the moon landings were faked when she worked at the agency a few decades ago. A former NASA contractor claims to have proof that the Apollo 11 moon landings were faked when she worked at the agency a few decades ago.
When Cyndi Holland got a job at NASA, she was over the moon. Metaphorically of course not in the way she believed the astronauts of the time were as they pootled around on the International Space Station.
I was a college student and janitor for the US Air Force when I applied for the contractor position with NASA, she recounts. It was the winter of 1996, I was a single mom to a five-year-old boy and was trying to get into a career. I was told by several Air Force employees that NASA wanted to hire women and black people, so I sent them my resume.
Within days, Cyndi had an interview and, shortly afterwards, was offered a job. It was an entry level IT Support position, she says. I was thrilled and terrified. Cyndi landed a job at NASA in 1996
Cyndi loved her job. I felt important for the first time. The job was unique and fun. I managed the computer back-up system, logged trouble calls, managed the plotter machine from the SR71 flights, installed software on users machines and put together computer stations.
Cyndis office was right next to the NASA photo lab. Thats where the photographic history was kept, explains Cyndi. It was off limits to most NASA employees unless escorted.
Being situated next to the lab, she often heard the technicians and photographers chatting while they worked. One afternoon, she overheard two photo lab technicians discussing the Apollo 11 moon landing of 1969. I could hear every word they said, claims Cyndi.
It was only when I heard one of them say I cant believe everyone in the world fell for it. Surely everyone can see it was all fake, one big hoax that my ears pricked up. NASA contractor Cyndi Holland says she overheard other NASA engineers claim the moon landings were "fake" and "one big hoax."
Despite the scandalous nature of this revelation, career-minded Cyndi, 28 at the time, engrossed in her work and not wanting jeopardize her job in any way, decided to forget about it. Im not sure if they knew I could hear them, if they wanted me to hear them
but they were being bold about it
I thought they were crazy and blew it off.
It was only much later in 2009 that the story sprang to Cindys mind once more. I started to become aware of what was going on in the world and began to look into various conspiracies. It all started to fall into place.
The first person she mentioned it to was her eldest son Brandon, then 18. Brandon had already worked out for himself that the moon landings were fake, so I decided to tell him about what Id heard at NASA. He wasnt surprised.
Now 47, a mum of four and living in Phoenix, Arizona, Cindy has recently become involved with the Flat Earth Movement. Through this, she has discovered that fellow members believe that the Apollo 11 moon landing never happened and that much of what happens around NASA is fake. I woke up in 2009 and I learned about all the fake stuff the US government had done and were doing. Around that time, I remembered an engineer at Lockheed Martin where I worked after I left NASA telling me the earth was flat. I didnt take it seriously at the time: it was not on my radar.
In May of 2016, Cyndi saw a YouTube video about the earth being flat
I was very surprised, she claims. I was intrigued and started my journey. For at least two weeks, I was in a daze, researching the subject overloading my brain with information.
Cyndi recalled the photo lab engineers at NASA laughing about how people believed in the moon landings and thats when she realized the truth
those technicians, like the Lockheed engineer before them, KNEW the true shape of the earth! As Cyndi says: They had to know if they worked in the photo lab
the pilots would bring photographers and take photos, they must have seen a ton of proof!
After further research, Cyndi has decided that its time to tell the world. I had to speak out, she says. Its too big a truth to withhold. I was afraid at first worried about the repercussions so didnt speak to anyone about it for months. But now I dont care who I lose or upset by sharing this truth. We are all flat earthers some people just dont know yet.
Jacqui Deevoy My love of fashion and music led me - several decades ago - into working for some of Britains top-selling magazines, specialising in news, reviews, fiction, features, astrology and quizzes.
These days, as a journalist, writer and editor I write a wide variety of features, frivolous and serious. I work mainly for women's magazines and national newspapers and also enjoy writing for independent news outlets and websites - the sort that publish stories the mainstream media fail to report.
Email: jacqui.deevoy@gmail.com