• Jesus
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    714 days ago

    If you’ve ever tried to coordinate more than 50 people to do a thing, you quickly realize why people refer to management and leadership jobs as “herding cats.”

    If someone gave me the option of faking the moon landing or going to the moon, I’d gladly strap a submarine to a missile.

    It be fucking impossible to coordinate hundreds of people on the world’s biggest secret, then make them and their families abide by media training for half a century.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      124 days ago

      Unless you’re working on something incredibly important, and you can threaten people with jail time if you tell anyone. The US government kept the SR-71 blackbird secret for about a decade, for example.

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        204 days ago

        True, but also I feel like that’s small potatoes by comparison.

        And also I feel like it’s related to the publicity of the thing that is supposedly a conspiracy. with the sr71 nobody even knew to look into it; with the moon landing, people were following the very public demonstrations every step of the way.

        • JackFrostNCola
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          English
          64 days ago

          Also the difference in wow factor.
          Its “we are making an even faster, better and more stealthy plane than all the previous ones we have” vs “we are convincing the entire world that we are leaving our actual planet to fly through space and land on the moon”. One of these is a significantly more juicy secret to impress someone with.

    • @assassinatedbyCIA
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      104 days ago

      I think there’s a danger in underestimating a government’s ability to keep a secret especially when they have the power to kill you and your family if you break it. While we shouldn’t overestimate the conspiracies they conduct (i.e. the world isn’t flat, we did land on the moon, vaccines don’t cause autism). I think it’s reasonable to suspect that your government is keeping some important information out of the public eye. Oft for the reason of “national security” aka, it would be embarrassing to us if this leaked.

    • @WhatAmLemmy
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      33 days ago

      You ever heard of a little trillion dollar operation known as the NSA?

      • Jesus
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        23 days ago

        It’s not the size of the organization, it’s the size of the team with a particular piece of information, and the monetary or moral pressure to release a particular piece of information.

        Also, the NSA famously has had leakers. The biggest and most notable being Snowden in 2013.

        • @WhatAmLemmy
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          English
          13 days ago

          A dozen leakers from a secret police that has employed hundreds of thousands, across decades, is not the example you think it is.

    • @Knock_Knock_Lemmy_In
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      23 days ago

      It be fucking impossible to coordinate hundreds of people on the world’s biggest secret, then make them and their families abide by media training for half a century.

      Yes you can. The Manhattan Project was the blueprint for this.