Sigh, you really do have to realize that we're used to this kind of game. "I was expecting X reaction, I did not receive it, so you must not know what you're talking about" -- your post was very much an obvious set-up. Also, how would a physicist being queried on pi correlate? It's more like going up to someone and saying you want to talk about China, and then asking them, "Was India Hindu? Yes or no?" Leading to the Historian going "Buh? What's that have to do with China?"
It also isn't endless commenting, but more like several historians all collectively going "Wait, what?" There's more than one poster, I think you'll find. The more than 24 hour wait for a response also will necessarily lead to more people posting to amuse themselves.
Also, "yes or no" didn't apply, since you did not frame it as a yes/no question, but that's small potatoes.
Assumption 1. Russians would have complained about Apollo, had it been faked.
Possible variations. Having proof about your adversary faking moonlanding would be used as an asset without an expiry date. What does mafia do to coerce people in committing murders and other crimes? They let you commit one( by hefty bonusing) and collect evidence for later blackmailing. Once you are in the fold, you are in the fold.If I were Soviet Union, I would use it for the good of our own people, and would demand in exchange for silence `price negotiations` for raw material purchase.
Speculation. This is entirely an "If I Ran The Zoo" form of argument. What actual data would support your view of events?
Why would I need an intangible consolation that I have won a mystical cold war?
For that matter, then, why would either side spend so much time and money on getting into space? The US wasn't the only one getting up there, and even if you argue that it was all done in a film studio, the amount of effort and money to spend to truly simulate 0 gravity, fake all that telemetry being constantly sent that was nearly impossible to fake, etc. would have been massively expensive (and quite implausible, at that); it was rather obvious, from events, that both sides took the space race very seriously.