No. It is a logical extrapolation from the obvious. It requires no special skills or knowledge to ascertain that if a thing cannot be then it isn't and if it appears to be then it is because of deception.
No, you're trying to have your cake and eat it too. You claim no special skills are required to accuse someone of conspiracy, but special skills are required to refute the accusation. That's special pleading.
You're also posing a false dilemma. You're saying the facts must either meet your expectations or else some deception has occurred. You don't have direct proof for the deception; you just conclude it "must" be the default if the conventional narrative fails your expectations. Among the options you refuse to consider is whether your expectations are valid. You have been shown the reasons why your expectation is invalid, but you simply repeat your beliefs and ignore the reasons.
Very often, especially in science, determining the whys and wherefores
does require special skills or knowledge. Especially if one's argument is based on eliminating all the other possibilities, leaving the one alternative, one must have an encyclopedic understanding of those other possibilities in order to refute them individually. You've disclaimed any special knowledge of astrophysics or space engineering or orbital mechanics or any of the other highly developed fields that pertain to your argument. It is therefore unreasonable for you to beg the reader to believe you have exhaustively eliminated the alternatives from your uninformed position. Lest that seem too abstract, you have been presented with examples of alternatives which you simply disregard.