I sometimes think of myself as the Official Non-Expert around here. Goodness knows I haven't read much original Apollo documentation and wouldn't understand it if I did. (I think I've told the story of Why Gillian Doesn't Know Physics Despite Taking It In High School before, but here it is again--my physics teacher in high school had two heart attacks in November. For the next two months, we had a substitute whose doctorate was in theatre and spent the class period doing things like discussing European architecture and playing board games. Then we had a two-week stretch with a Cal Tech teacher, or TA, or something, who mostly tried to teach us over our heads. When my actual teacher returned, my whole class--none of whom really cared about physics so much as we did about having it on our transcript for college applications--decided it was our job to make sure our teacher didn't exert himself too much and put in as little actual work as we could get away with to encourage him to take our class period easy as well. To the point of having regular in-class potlucks.) I simply don't have the background.
What I do have is an understanding of how "experts" work. When someone can demonstrate ability in a field and says, "My expertise in this field is enough for me to know that [thing] is valid," I know to trust them rather than say, "Well, it still doesn't look right to me, so it must be wrong." Something about the fluid dynamics doesn't make sense to me? Well, of course it doesn't! What do I know from fluid dynamics?
That said, of course, I do have a certain understanding of some of the non-STEM issues involved, such as the Cold War context and certain of the psychological aspects, including Buzz Aldrin's depression. Though who was it who said I don't know as much about film as I think I do, when I provided a detailed explanation of why Kubrick would've been about the worst possible choice to direct Apollo missions?