It is still the foundation of my argument. A problem arose when the both the CraTer and MSL/RAD data was rejected as being inapplicable because it was from a different solar cycle.
ANd the implications of this were ignored by yourself. SOlar cycle 20 was more energetic than 24, therefore the GCR in cycle 20 was expected to be lower. Since the CraTER data repeatedly has been shown to demonstrate lower GCR flux than your magic minimum it is not a showstopper for Apollo.
To get around this obstacle I cited a NASA range of expected GCR dose rates.
No, you cited an article that stated an
average rate of 0.24mGy/day and said that number was a
minimum level, which you still can't seem to understand is not the same thing at all.
There was then an outcry that although this was a valid comparison it was to broad to cover specifics like a 10 day lunar transit.
Not an outcry, a reasonable point that an average taken over a couple of years cannot be used as any kind of baseline for a two-week mission.
It was presented that theoretically the apollo could have ventured out in the rain and not gotten wet because the cosmos lined up just right.
THis is not miraculous. You keep insisting that it is, but it really isn't. To use the rainfall anaogy, yesterday it rained here. I went out and did not get wet. Why not? Because although the average rainfall during the day was a certain level, I went out when it wasn't raining. That's why you can't use avergaes as minima.
I am trying to negotiate this minefield as best I can.
No, youre trying desperately to avoid admitting you made mistakes, and are shifting the goalposts repeatedly when you can no longer defend your evidence as the smoking gun you presented it as.
I ask you again, what would convince you that you being wrong is actually a reasonable hypothesis?