Feel free to disregard any information that doesn't support your hypothesis. It is the way of religious fanatics isn't it?
More projection than an IMAX there.
Tim, seriously, you're dealing with
subject matter experts in a wide range of fields,
including orbital mechanics, spacecraft design and manufacture, various types of radiation and its effects, visual effects, radio communications, etc. Their rebuttals are anything but
faith-based . They're based on experience and deep practical knowledge. You're also dealing with a number of enthusiastic amateurs who've taken non-trivial amounts of time to do their own research in those same fields
1 (probably enough hours to earn an undergraduate degree or two).
And then you have people who simply understand
logic. Like LO and others have said, a hoax of this magnitude would
inevitably have been exposed long before now. Literally tens of thousands of people (in different countries, not all of whom are friends with the US, no less!) would have to have been in on it. Like the old saying goes, three people can keep a secret if two of them are dead.
I've seen this pattern play out in other fora (particularly talk.origins, with people who don't even have a rudimentary layman's knowledge of biology explaining why evolution is impossible to evolutionary biologists). To borrow a trite argument from that group, you're not the first person to ask "if humans are descended from apes, why are there still apes?" You're not the
thousandth person to ask that question.
Your arguments here are neither new nor novel.
You're basically proving out Tom Nichols' thesis in "
The Death of Expertise: The Campaign Against Established Knowledge and Why It Matters". Anyone can find a link on Google or a paper in an "open" journal that supports their particular viewpoint. The question is (a) whether that paper is representative of the best research on the subject, and (b) whether that paper actually supports your argument or not.
The radiation levels reported from Apollo in cis-lunar space may well be below that reported by MSL during its transit. That could come down to differences in detectors; it could be the Apollo-era detectors were less sensitive than the MSL-era detectors. It could also be that the radiation environment during the Apollo missions
really was lower than during the MSL transit - either the Apollo period was unusually quiescent, or the MSL period was unusually active. Or they could be within a normal range of variation. Can you eliminate that as a possibility?
There are plenty of explanations that are far, far more likely than "NASA faked the data to make it look like humans could go to the Moon when they really can't."
It's like I ask of people who claim the surface footage was shot on a soundstage - find me evidence
for that soundstage. Don't waste time arguing over reflections, backgrounds, or perspective - find me a paper trail. People had to get paid to build it, to design, build, and light the sets, to operate the cameras, etc. There will be bank records
somewhere. Find pictures from "backstage". Show me a picture of a grip smoking a cigarette between takes.
And I'm
not talking about the training mockups, which are quite obviously
training mockups. They're not what was presented as the lunar surface during the actual missions.
1. I am not one of those people.