Wayne Green presents his analysis of the Apollo moon missions, examining technical and photographic evidence that he believes proves the moon landings were staged on Earth rather than representing genuine space exploration achievements. His background in electronics and publishing provides technical perspective on the feasibility of 1960s space technology and the possibility that the missions were elaborate hoaxes designed to win the space race. Green discusses specific technical challenges involved in lunar travel including radiation exposure, life support systems, and spacecraft design that he argues were beyond 1960s technological capabilities. He examines photographic and video evidence from the Apollo missions, identifying inconsistencies in lighting, shadows, and other technical details that suggest studio production rather than lunar surface documentation. The conversation covers the political motivations for faking the moon landings and how such deception might have been coordinated between government agencies, NASA, and media organizations. Green addresses the institutional resistance to questioning Apollo achievements while examining how national pride and scientific credibility prevent objective evaluation of moon mission claims. His research includes analysis of rocket technology, spacecraft capabilities, and mission timelines that he believes demonstrate impossibility of achieving lunar travel with 1960s technology. The discussion explores implications of moon landing hoax theories for understanding government deception and the manipulation of public perception through media control. Green's presentation challenges one of the most celebrated achievements in human history while raising questions about official narratives and technological capabilities.