No, I am hoping my critics will rise to the challenge because I am happy to be proven wrong. So if you have it in you, prove me wrong.
No, this is classic burden-of-proof shifting. You've done nothing but express faith in the opinions of two people, and you expect your critics to write academic papers to dispose you of those beliefs. You've posed a challenge that you hope seems reasonable on its face, but which a reasonable person would be reluctant to accept for the sheer amount of work it requires.
Tell you what. If you want an academically rigorous refutation of your article, get it published in a mainstream science or history journal. Then you can demand scholarly-level rebuttals.
Or rather, prove Conrad and Bean wrong. They said dust wouldn't have been deposited on the Surveyor by the LM.
And I've given you examples of factors they likely did not consider when rendering that opinion. But since we have no way of knowing what they did or did not consider, or what concepts of physics they might have had in mind, this is why we generally consider hearsay evidence to be unsatisfying. I can't go back and quiz Conrad and Bean to know what they were thinking, or to pose my alternatives to them and see what they think about it.
But since you are advocating them, I can ask you. Do you have any comment on the alternatives I mentioned?
If it wasn't deposited by the LM, where did it come from?
Did you read the other posts?