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That wall

That wall

Posted Feb 28, 2008 9:27 UTC (Thu) by ncm (subscriber, #165)
In reply to: That wall by corbet
Parent article: A Beijing trip report

Of course "all" is a slippery term in the mouth of a tour guide. What does it mean to integrate two walls -- segments, if you like -- that run more or less parallel, a hundred miles apart?

People who don't believe Neil A. walked on the moon nonetheless happily believe The Great Wall is visible from there. That's some crackerjack marketing. No doubt you'll come away from reading this still sort of believing in it; it actually takes practice to stop. Compared to that, accepting that Kentucky Fried Chicken's "seven secret herbs and spices" were really just salt and pepper is easy.


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That wall

Posted Feb 28, 2008 19:52 UTC (Thu) by utoddl (subscriber, #1232) [Link]

Eleven. Not seven. Otherwise, yeah.

That wall

Posted Feb 29, 2008 3:29 UTC (Fri) by smitty_one_each (subscriber, #28989) [Link]

>The Great Wall is visible from there. 
I thought the claim was that the wall is visible from earth orbit, not the moon.

That wall

Posted Feb 29, 2008 5:30 UTC (Fri) by ncm (subscriber, #165) [Link]

Everything's visible from (low) earth orbit -- canals, roads, smoke plumes. The claim was that the Great Wall was the only man-made feature that could be picked out from the moon. Of course it's completely false -- none of the walls are visible at that distance -- but the clouds enshrouding Beijing do look distinctly brown.

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