If NASA would share video from the far-side of the moon, we might see something like this:
https://cdn.masto.host/mastjohn1126com/media_attachments/files/116/370/506/931/680/329/original/389c8baee217fdc3.mp4
download|http://filsofia.com/share/20260408-moon-people---HQ.mp4
This imagery is based on the book God gave to man through Jakob Lorber, published in 1847:
Earth and Moon, available for reading in the
library.
My expectations are fairly low for NASA's disclosure. However, the astronauts were recorded saying they saw greenish hues on the far side.
When beginning to look at the far side of the moon, they saw color, including a "greenish hue".
https://cdn.masto.host/mastjohn1126com/media_attachments/files/116/361/384/336/991/959/original/68936d1e133d1e0f.mp4
This should be big news, because green is the color of plants!
An astronaut did say something positive about God, which I appreciated. Moments before the Artemis II crew was blocked from communicating with ground control, as it went behind the moon, astronaut Victor Glover sends one last message to remind us of our greatest commandment: LOVE.
https://cdn.masto.host/mastjohn1126com/media_attachments/files/116/364/377/638/420/275/original/b2c690eb25d4191a.mp4
But he is only one man in this mission. Will NASA release the good details of what they saw on the far side?

source (bigger):
https://www.flickr.com/photos/nasa2explore/55193178333/in/album-72177720307234654
There are some beautiful images released, but so far only a small fraction of those taken are publicly available.
240 images. That is the current count on the #NASA flickr page for the Artemis II moon mission. Only a fraction of the images are actually of the moon, in any quality that would exceed that of what amateurs on Earth could produce with a telescope. There are some incredible shots there, for sure, but they are small in number. Let's see more of the images! Are there not thousands of images taken?
https://www.flickr.com/photos/nasa2explore/albums/72177720307234654/
NASA
said before launch:
"For Artemis II, Orion will carry 31 cameras designed to capture the mission from every angle."
There should be many thousands of images of the moon. "According to NASA, the astronauts took roughly 10,000 photos, which feels perfectly proportional for such an occasion."
source: theatlantic.com/archived