Glossy Objects Filmed on the Moon: Electromagnetic Spacecraft?

During the Apollo missions, crews were in charge of taking a lot of pictures. In them, you can see strange bright and shiny objects that appear on or near the Moon.
The photographs show some strange images of these rare glowing objects. They were captured on the Apollo 11, 12, 13, 14 and 16 missions.
glowing objects on the moon
During Apollo 13, the third mission to land on the Moon was supposed to be accomplished. An explosion in one of the oxygen tanks crippled the spacecraft in flight and the crew was forced to orbit the Moon and return to Earth without landing.
During the Moon’s orbit, the crew captured strange glowing objects that were located on the lunar top and surface.
Now, it appears that there is a kind of Lunar Industry, which has been maintained for at least the last 50 years in Plato’s crater, ever since moving and flickering lights have been observed at the bottom of the crater.
Over more than 100 years, the British Royal Astronomical Society reported at least 1,600 similar sightings of bright objects in the Aristarchus crater , on the eastern foot of the lunar Alps , on Mare Crisium, a series of dots and rays also being seen of light. Also, there are long lines of light that have been seen from the Eudoxus crater .
Possible electromagnetic ships?
These glowing objects appear to be powered by a type of electromagnetic energy . This energy would offer unlimited opportunities to build huge objects, as well as move and live in almost any environment.
These electromagnetic spacecraft emit a very pulsating glow under different conditions, such as the density of the atmosphere, humidity, speed and height of the spacecraft.
There is no longer any doubt that many of these lights, especially the bright moving and glowing objects, are remotely controlled “electromagnetic spaceships”.
It is not the first time that we have heard that there is an extraterrestrial civilization inhabiting the Moon since the different Apollo missions. From historical figures of space exploration, to former space agency workers.