Kaysing asserted that during his tenure at Rocketdyne he was privy to documents pertaining to the Mercury, Gemini, Atlas, and Apollo programs, arguing that one does not need an engineering or science degree to determine that a hoax was being perpetrated. Even before July 1969, he had "a hunch, an intuition, ... a true conviction" and decided that he didn't believe that anyone was going to the moon. Kaysing wrote a book entitled
We Never Went to the Moon, which was self-published in 1974, listing Randy Reid as a coauthor. It was republished in 2002 by Health Research Books, with no coauthor listed. In his book, Kaysing introduced arguments which he said proved the moon landings were faked.
Claims in the book and subsequent sources include:
- *NASA lacked the technical expertise to put a man on the moon.
- *The absence of stars in lunar surface photographs.
- *The film used by astronauts on the moon should have melted due to the supposed high levels of radiation.
- *Unexplained optical anomalies in the photographs taken on the moon.
- *The undulating flags seen in video clips seem incompatible with a vacuum.
- *The absence of blast craters beneath the lunar modules. Their rocket engines should have blasted away tons of moon dust in the final seconds of descent.
Kaysing also claimed that NASA staged both the Apollo 1 fire and the Challenger accident, deliberately murdering the astronauts on board. He suggested that NASA might have learned that these astronauts were about to expose the conspiracy and needed to guarantee their silence. A vocal advocate of conspiracy theories, Kaysing believed there is a high level conspiracy involving the Central Intelligence Agency, Federal Reserve (not a government agency), Internal Revenue Service and other government agencies to brain wash the American public, poison their food supply and control the media. Nardwuar vs Bill Kaysing He also implied that the death of NASA safety inspector Thomas Ronald Baron in a traffic accident with a train a week after he testified before the United States Congress, and the disappearance of his 500-page report, was not an accident. He was also a participant in the Fox Broadcasting Company documentary
Conspiracy Theory: Did We Land on the Moon? , which aired on February 15, 2001.
In 1997, Kaysing filed a lawsuit against astronaut Jim Lovell for libel when Lovell called Kaysing's claims "wacky" in the
San José Metro News, July 25-31, 1996. Metroactive News & Issues | Polis Report
The guy is wacky. His position makes me feel angry. We spent a lot of time getting ready to go to the moon. We spent a lot of money, we took great risks, and it's something everyone in this country should be proud of. ... James Lovell
The case was dismissed in 1999 following the granting of a Motion for Summary Judgment filed by San Francisco attorney John Hardy, representing James Lovell. The judgment was affirmed on appeal on First Amendment grounds.
As a result of Kaysing's claims he believed there was a conspiracy against him. One such event was Price Stern Sloan Publishers' decision not to publish his book, after paying a small advance in exchange for the manuscript. The editor's comments:
I'm afraid we disavow it. You need to read it objectively and critically and perhaps ORGANIZE IT. As it is it wanders all over the landscape. Several interesting paragraphs but they don't hold together, link together. You've also wandered from third to first person. It needs a lot of work. You don't really have a manuscript here - seemed more like random notes about what you WOULD write about if you got around to it. What I mean, it reads like notes to the AUTHOR.
Kaysing has wondered why the publisher didn't want to have anything more to do with the book.