The Moon
The Moon is presented as a natural satellite, yet its properties raise persistent questions that remain inadequately addressed. Its diameter is roughly a quarter of Earth’s, yet its mass is only about 1.2% of Earth’s mass—an extreme discrepancy that is not observed elsewhere in the known universe. Objects of comparable size typically display far greater proportional mass. This alone places the Moon outside expected formation models.
Its surface adds further anomalies. The Moon is densely cratered, yet many craters appear to share similar depths despite vast differences in diameter. Under conventional impact physics, depth should scale more dramatically with size. The surface appears less like fractured rock and more like a rigid shell that absorbed impacts in a uniform way. This has led some researchers to describe the Moon as behaving more like a resonant structure than a loose geological body.
The Moon’s placement is equally unusual. Its distance from Earth is so precise that during a solar eclipse it perfectly obscures the Sun, despite the Sun being vastly larger. This precise angular equivalence is mathematically improbable and unique within the observable solar system. There is no known functional necessity for such precision, yet it exists.
Ancient records introduce another layer. Multiple early cultures reference a time before the Moon or describe its arrival as a disruptive event that altered tides, seasons, and even Earth’s orientation. While these accounts are often dismissed as myth, their consistency across civilizations suggests they may encode historical observations rather than pure symbolism.
Modern testimony continues the pattern. Channelers such as Darryl Anka, through Bashar, describe extraterrestrial activity associated with the Moon, including long-term observation of humanity. Similar descriptions appear in out-of-body exploration literature, most notably from Robert Monroe, who independently reported non-human entities using the Moon as a monitoring and data-collection hub for Earth-related activity.
Even official space programs recorded unusual behavior. In November 1969, NASA deliberately impacted the Moon with the Apollo 12 lunar module ascent stage, producing energy comparable to approximately one ton of TNT. Seismometers recorded reverberations lasting over 30 minutes. Scientists involved publicly stated that the Moon “rang like a bell,” an outcome inconsistent with expectations for a solid, dead rock body of its size.
Taken together—its mass discrepancy, structural behavior, precise positioning, ancient accounts, experiential reports, and modern experimental results—the Moon presents a collection of anomalies. Whether artificial, altered, or simply misunderstood, the certainty with which its nature is presented does not reflect the volume of unresolved questions surrounding it.