Around 6%
A hoaxer causes people to spread a made-up story that they believe is true.
A hoax is a trick. Here are some sentences.He played a hoax on us and made us think the house was haunted.The email from Nigeria is a hoax.I don't want to fall for a hoax.
fake, phony
The solid water balls videos are a hoax. The person in the video is using these: http://www.teachersource.com/Chemistry/HydrophilicHydrophobicPolymers/GrowingSpheresThreeSizes.aspx Repeat: The solid water balls video is hoax. If you try it, you will only end up with a pan that has to be thrown away.
For heat transfer: Background radiation can be dismiss in many case where the main radiation source is lot more stronger and result from including of background radiation to equation give complicate hardship with very infinitesimal result. For matter of health and safety: Harmful radiation would mean those of shorter than 250 nm wavelength or so. Background radiation from any ambient temperature or man-made heat source would yield very very tiny amount of those. Some minor radioactive decay do presence in every day life including our body that contain minor amount of radioactive carbon. For matter of Cellphone Microwave hoax: You will find plenty of these nuisance E-mail warning about danger of modern hi-tech equipment emitting microwave and radio frequency that cook the egg and pop the popcorn. Most of those old background radiation hoax was debunk but new creative method of public nuisance is always on the inbox.
That it was just a hoax.
No, the moon landings were real. Another answer: Although many people do believe this, and some claim that they have evidence, I don't think that it is a hoax. Believe what you want, but it isn't.
the same reason people believe the moon landing was a hoax.
No, the 1969 moon landing is not a hoax. There is overwhelming evidence from multiple sources, including photographs, videos, and personal accounts from astronauts, that confirm the Apollo 11 mission successfully landed humans on the moon.
No. Every Apollo mission reached the moon except of course Apollo 13.
It was not a hoax, it was real.
While it's difficult to determine an exact number, surveys suggest that only a small percentage of people believe the moon landing was a hoax. Studies show that less than 10% of Americans hold this belief. The overwhelming majority of people accept that the moon landing was a real event.
Because they choose to deny the overwhelming evidence that proves that 12 men really did fly to the moon and land on its surface and walk on it. There is no concrete evidence to support any hoax hypothesis.
It wasn't, the moon landings were real.
There is no evidence to support the claim that the moon landing was a hoax. Multiple lines of evidence, including photos, videos, and samples brought back by astronauts, confirm the authenticity of the moon landing. Various independent investigations and scientific analyses have also debunked the hoax theories.
an elephant, a submarine, a mmonster, a hoax, etc.
The main conspiracy theory surrounding the first moon landing in 1969 is that it was staged by the U.S. government to win the Space Race against the Soviet Union. Some believe that the footage was filmed on a soundstage and that the entire Apollo 11 mission was a hoax. However, there is overwhelming evidence to support the authenticity of the moon landing.