This one is a brilliant debunk of this dopey claim. The footage where Gene Cernan does his hippity-hoppity routine closes this case in one tiny segment....
Thanks for the attempt at debunking. This gave me some homework to do. I consider your "hippity hoppity" rebuttal as a failure.
Today I obtained the NASA source video for this clip, as well as the Navy salute, and captured all frames at native resolution, without modification.
1. Navy Salute - appears to be damning for the PNA's.
2. The Hippity Hoppity attempted rebuttal has a major flaw.
I have placed all of my work on OneDrive, summarized in a google doc, with links to folders of the frame captures, as well as a KRITA project that overlays all frames as layers, and an MP4 for each that shows the sequence. I used VLC to export NASA's mpg frames to images.
Check it out and let me know what you think:https://docs.google.com/document/d/1aos6_EqxlNfpLUGoSSemppmw_lUjl0hiby99szCKYi4/edit?usp=sharingSpoiler - for the Hippity Hoppity attempted rebuttal, I pasted my conclusions here for your convenience:
#1 - This dot stays nearly stationary and the same size for 10 frames! (1/3rd second)
If it was incoming sand, it would be moving along the ground.
#2 - There is no sign of any dust coming in from above. It’s fully invisible, then this dot just magically appears, and stays nearly stationary for 10 frames, and PNA’s call it dust.
#3 - Let’s imagine that this is dust (magical). As he’s hopping along, each time he has to kick his feet forward as part of the hopping motion. This kicking motion would cause some dust to have an added upward boost. But since this dust is also INVISIBLE until it hits the ground many frames later – we are not able to tell by what trajectory it arrived at its stationary destination.