Fantasy Declares Certainty

Kim Kardashian,
TikTok And The Flag
That Didn’t Blow

Quoting Kim Kardashian on the Moon Landing

Kim Kardashian recently said on The Kardashians:
“They’re gonna say I’m crazy no matter what, but like, go to TikTok. See for yourself. […] There’s no gravity on the moon. Why is the flag blowing? The shoes that they have in the museum that they wore on the moon is a different print in the photos. Why are there no stars?”

“There’s no gravity on the Moon.”

This is incorrect. The Moon has about one-sixth the gravity of Earth (1.62 m/s²). That is why the astronauts could walk, hop and fall slowly, exactly as seen in the footage. If there were no gravity, they would have floated away completely.

“Why is the flag blowing?”

It only appears to be blowing. The flag contained a horizontal support rod along the top to keep it extended in the airless lunar environment. When the astronauts twisted the pole during setup, the cloth continued to ripple due to inertia and with no air resistance, the motion persisted. There was no wind at all.

“Different shoe prints.”

The prints in the lunar soil came from overshoes that the astronauts wore over their pressure suits. The pairs displayed in museums are often the inner boots, not the outer ones. The difference in tread patterns is therefore expected and fully documented in NASA’s archival materials.

“Why are there no stars?”

The absence of stars is a simple matter of camera exposure. The surface of the Moon, brightly illuminated by direct sunlight, required very short exposure times and narrow apertures. Stars, which are far dimmer, were not bright enough to register on film at those settings, just as they do not appear in daylight photographs taken on Earth.

Conclusion

The Flag That Didn’t Blow

The persistence of these questions is not evidence of deception but of how easy it is to mistake absence of context for conspiracy. Every one of Kim Kardashian’s concerns can be answered through straightforward physics, engineering records and publicly available NASA data.

The real flag on the Moon did not blow. It waved once and then stayed exactly as it was planted, in the silent, airless presence of lunar gravity.

Produced by The Lilborn Equation Team:

Michael Lilborn-Williams

Daniel Thomas Rouse

Thomas Jackson Barnard

Audrey Williams