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Kim Kardashian Says The 1969 Moon Landing Never Happened

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Celebrity television personality and entrepreneurial powerhouse Kim Kardashian is now at the center of a heated controversy following her assertion that she doubts the authenticity of the 1969 lunar landing.

During the most recent installment of The Kardashians, the 45-year-old attempted to persuade performer Sarah Paulson that the landmark Apollo 11 voyage was fabricated—and she arrived equipped with what she called “evidence.”

“I’m sending you so far a million interviews with both Buzz Aldrin and… the other one,” Kim said, referring to Neil Armstrong.

“This girl asks, ‘What was the scariest moment?’ and [Aldrin] goes, ‘There was no scary moment, cause it didn’t happen.’”

Paulson, entertained yet intrigued, urged her to “do it,” as Kim intensified her stance, insisting the space traveler had “gotten old” and begun to “slip up.”

“So I think it didn’t happen,” Kim boldly declared.

Within her on-camera reflection, she escalated her position even more:

“I don’t think we did. I think it was fake. I’ve seen a few videos of Buzz Aldrin talking about how it didn’t happen. He says it all the time now.”

The creator of SKIMS proceeded to browse her smartphone, posing every one of those “TikTok scientist” inquiries—
“Why is the flag blowing when there’s no gravity? Why are the moon shoes in the museum different from the photos? Why are there no stars?”

As a production team member inquired about her response to those labeling her as unhinged, Kim answered,

“They’re gonna say I’m crazy no matter what. But like… go to TikTok. See for yourself.”

On the other hand, Buzz Aldrin, aged 95 at present, has consistently denied any suggestion that the moon landing was fabricated. Those alleged “slip-ups” of his turned out to be outdated footage from interviews that had been misinterpreted—one particular instance from 2015, during which he merely noted that a “scary moment didn’t happen.”

To set the facts straight, Aldrin and Neil Armstrong became the initial pair of humans to set foot on the moon during July 20, 1969—a milestone that Aldrin continues to honor annually as “an achievement born of teamwork and effort.”

A Gentle Reminder: Every obstacle is a stepping stone, every morning; a chance to go again, and those little steps take you closer to your dream.

Nnamdi Okoli

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