This isn't about me.
As long as your argument is based on your interpretation of technical data, your qualifications to do so remain relevant. They are, in fact, the
only thing that's relevant in an argument based on judgment. You seem to be suggesting that the Apollo spacecraft were improperly designed. That judgment carries weight only when the person making it has expertise in spacecraft design. Asking about that expertise is not "making it about the person." It's addressing the argument on the proffered grounds.
You don't have to be a mechanic to know something is wrong with your car.
Do you have to be a trained nuclear technician to operate a nuclear propulsion plant? Or is there an 18-month training course you have to pass before they let you anywhere near one? You're suggesting astrophysics and space engineering is comparable to consumer automotive engineering, much of which is intended to be user-serviceable.
I can read and I can see.
Are you claiming astrophysics, space medicine, and space engineering are nothing more than ordinary layman's common sense? At first you claimed your experience as a Navy nuclear technician qualified you to draw these conclusions. That implied -- correctly -- that expertise was required. Now you seem to be claiming that no expertise is necessary to evaluate spacecraft designs. You seem to change your mind on what's required based on what you think you can convince people you have.
Take a moment to review the data and embrace the issue. Intellectual cowardice is so unappealing.
So is bluster.