My argument is presented in my article. But, okay, here is a condensed version.
Photographs of Surveyor 3 clearly show it is discolored due to being covered in dust. The astronauts, however, insisted the discoloring was caused by the paint having been been baked in the Sun. Then, after half an hour examining the lander, they suddenly realized it was covered in dust. I find that hard to believe.
Why do you find it hard to believe?
The astronauts had already suggested to Houston that any dust is likely to have blown over Surveyor. They changed their mind when they examined it more carefully. The intervening time was not entirely spent looking for dust - they were examining everything about the probe and its immediate environment, not just looking through their
tinted visors for dust. You also seem puzzled as to why, when landing a spacecraft, looking through windows and a visor, they can't spot fine dust entrained by the LM engine. Just because the 16mm camera didn;t pick it up, and just because they didn't see it, doesn't mean it wasn't there.
Also, as far as I can see, there has never been a convincing explanation for why the Surveyor 3 was covered in dust.
Did you decided this before researching the subject or after? What about the explanations offered is unconvincing?
A small amount was deposited during the Surveyor's "difficult" landing - the T.V. images sent back were blurred, and that seems to have been caused by dust deposited on the camera's mirror. Explanations for the dust shown on the Apollo 12 photographs have included "lunar fountains" and the electrostatic attraction of the lander. The most popular explanation is that dust was blown onto the Surveyor when the LM flew past prior to landing. When asked by Mission Control, Conrad and Bean had said any dust would have flown over the top of the lander.
The most popular explanation is actually that the LM blew dust off the lander rather than deposit it, that dust is likely to have come from electrostatic attraction caused by repeated heating and cooling of the surface.
Other specific points in your article:
You seem to want to cast doubt on the precision landing of Apollo 12, based on the fact that Apollo 11 landed 6km away from the intended site. Apollo 11's distance was not down to inaccuracy, but to the lack of high enough resolution photographs showing the hazards at their intended destination. Those hazards have been confirmed by later probes.
Putting the word accidentally in quotes is just a cheap shot. You imply that Bean did it on purpose. I have met him, I'm willing to bet you haven't. I know who I believe.
You claim that Mission Control had prior knowledge of dust and its distribution. That is not reflected in the question they asked. They asked about effects of the dust from landing, something they knew about having a) an understanding of the subject, b) seen the Apollo 11 16mm footage, and c) having heard the astronauts talk about dust during landing.
You claim that the astronauts were 'certain' that Surveyor 3 wouldn't be covered in dust. In fact Conrad said it would 'probably' have gone right over the top of it. Bean is sure, but they were both kind of busy you know, landing the spacecraft. They made an
a priori judgement, they were wrong, just like you did and are. Technically, they weren't wrong. They said the lander wouldn't be covered in dust from the landing - it wasn't. What they didn't expect was for it to be covered in dust at all.
Your photograph of the Surveyor 1 is disingenuous. Figure 3.38, 4.7 and 4.8 in the Surveyor 3 Preliminary Report
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.$c239744
clearly shows dirt deposited on the footpad by the sampler arm in the same place as photographed by Apollo 12. Surveyor 1 had no such sampler arm.
Photographs taken by later space probes confirm both the detail in Apollo photographs and human activity at the landing site. Photographs taken of Earth during the mission confirm that those images were taken during the mission timeline. These are incontrovertible facts. I'm sure you want to avoid them by narrowing your focus into a micro-detail where you feel there is room for ambiguity, but the Apollo mission did not consist of one aspect alone. The Surveyor probe is one small feature of it.