Author Topic: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast  (Read 10421 times)

Offline najak

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #345 on: December 10, 2024, 05:02:37 PM »
I'm getting pissy...
Maybe you should take a break then.
There isn't that much work to be done here.  The generalized (and generally accurate enough) model for the fluid dynamics involved in "static pressure buildup" are fairly simple.  Simple equations can produce "accurate enough conclusions".

Or if not -- Jay, the expert -- should simply say "you ALSO need to add in this other factor/concept"... and I will.

We could have skipped a week of stalling with just a few simple sentences from Jay:
1. Combustion produces MJ of energy per kg, while the mechanical energy of the AM after 1 second is still measured in kJ...
2. At steady state, the pressure of the Nozzle can be calculated as a function of "Constant Exhaust flow" (must match between Chamber to Nozzle, and Nozzle to outside)... and "Restriction/constriction" of air flow is linearly proportional to aperture size (close enough).   Therefore we can EASILY calculate "Nozzle Pressure" as a function of the aperture size of the exit surface area, which is a function of AM altitude.

This would have taken him a few minutes - and my digestion would have been IMMEDIATE.  No reason to think otherwise, as these basics of fluid dynamics are easy-algebra, and well-established.

If I hadn't been needlessly stuck on #1 above (a SIMPLE concept that I simply missed, like "dude, you forgot your phone; here it is").

So I've done this in my spreadsheet, and could have done this a week ago, if he had simply stated these VERY SIMPLE CONCEPTS.   

I was stuck on "Conservation of Momentum" because of a common misnomer that "60% efficiency == 60% of combustion is transferred into the AM's mechanical energy"...   I would have been UNSTUCK IMMEDIATELY if Jay had said One simple sentence  (#1 above).

Here is my spreadsheet employing these concepts.

I'm awaiting next Steps from Jay - or corrections/confirmation of steps taken so far (a few minutes of attention, for a professional with grasp of fluid dynamics).

Here's my current spreadsheet - -- see tab #3:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1qYtfrOghTwQ-C3sxMIerEGokdxFqFdM32_NX-TmpELs/edit?usp=drive_link
« Last Edit: December 10, 2024, 05:40:47 PM by najak »

Offline beedarko

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #346 on: December 10, 2024, 07:28:20 PM »
Even if we didn't land men on the moon, they are all Patriots

But still liars according to you, right?  And therefore lesser life forms.

It's okay - you can say it.  Stop pussyfooting and just admit what your core message is.  All your flouncy theatrics are super cringe.

Quote
I have several big issues to settle here.  I've gotten through 4 so far.

How much has your acknowledgement of the historical reality of Apollo increased as a result?



« Last Edit: December 10, 2024, 07:40:56 PM by beedarko »

Offline najak

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #347 on: December 11, 2024, 01:40:25 AM »
#1: But still liars according to you, right?  And therefore lesser life forms.
#2: How much has your acknowledgement of the historical reality of Apollo increased as a result?
#1: Nope.  They were most definitely Patriots, and I believe the Lie was a burden they bore (part gain, but with sacrifice).  I don't proclaim that "life would have been better had they just admitted defeat."   Better is better, and I don't regret how things went.

I don't even proclaim to know that "uncovering the lie at this point" makes the world better.    It's simply my calling, and "seems like right thing to do", for me.  Because it's related to Science, and it pains me to see people so easily fooled, when what appears to me as "obvious scientific and circumstantial evidence" is so easily dismissed by society as a whole.

In the end, if I had my way and everyone's "eyes were opened" - I have no idea the outcome.  I only know that it's my calling to get to the bottom of it.

And if the end game is that I become an Apollogist - that's even better.  I will do so proudly.

#2: I've learned 10,000% more about Apollo than I knew 10 weeks ago.  I'm far less enthralled with "the Moon and Space" than I am with "the manner in which govt's establish control over the people, manufacture narratives, and make use of propaganda, legally, for these purposes -- simply by tying it to a war effort or national threat".  Snowden is my hero.  Thomas Baron is my hero.  Daniel Ellsberg too.   Along with the unsung heroes who tried to do the same, but were stopped/caught and never heard of... but paid a price that we'll never know about.  These are my kinsmen.

At the same time, I view Patriots as Patriots.  The ones I CRITICIZE most are those who put themselves ABOVE others.... those who seek to be TAKERS, without any concern for giving back.  What matters to me most in judging others is simply this -- are you are giver or a taker?   Honesty vs. Lying is of much less concern - but rather "what are your motives"?   Lying for good causes is good.  Honesty for bad causes is bad.

We're all in this together.  We are One.   And I'm going down this path, because it seems to be my destiny to do so.   And see where it leads.
« Last Edit: December 11, 2024, 02:29:30 AM by najak »

Offline najak

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #348 on: December 11, 2024, 03:00:52 AM »
@JayUTAH - yoohoo.   How about a few words of confirmation or correction here.  I've taken the next few steps on estimating the expected contribution in thrust for this "static pressure build-up".  I'd "done the work" on my own here -- so please provide a little feedback on these preliminary results.

Offline najak

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #349 on: December 11, 2024, 08:01:37 AM »
@JayUTAH - it's been 3 days since your last response.  Can you chime in with a few words?

Offline beedarko

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #350 on: December 11, 2024, 08:32:07 AM »
@JayUTAH - it's been 3 days since your last response.  Can you chime in with a few words?

Paying attention when you're given information isn't really your thing, is it? 

Offline najak

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #351 on: December 11, 2024, 09:03:23 AM »
Paying attention when you're given information isn't really your thing, is it?
I've got a lot coming at me..  What did I miss?

Offline najak

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #352 on: December 12, 2024, 06:23:15 AM »
@JayUTAH - it's been 3 days since your last response.  Can you chime in with a few words?
@JayUTAH - please give us some sort of update or progress report?  I'd like to know if you are working on this at all?  ETA?

Since my preliminary analysis seems to indicate that this "static pressure thrust" loses the ability to provide the needed extra thrust after about 6" from lift-off... I'm imagining it's not going well for you right now, if you are working on this - as you probably see it too.

My next step is to address a few of the concerns thrown at me regarding the image analysis, and then to add a few more frames of analysis into the mix, to provide more image analysis data points for the first 0.5 seconds of lift-off--- to better assess the "steadiness" of the acceleration curve.  Detect if there is any sign of an early "boost" in acceleration.



Offline JayUtah

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #353 on: December 12, 2024, 09:59:56 AM »
@JayUTAH - it's been 3 days since your last response.  Can you chime in with a few words?

I'm back from having spent three days unexpectedly in Seattle on business. Give me a bit to catch up on the thread, which—after some skimming—appears to be about ninety percent arrogant posturing from you and about ten percent you continuing to attempt to learn science.
"Facts are stubborn things." --John Adams

Offline najak

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #354 on: December 12, 2024, 10:23:37 AM »
I'm back from having spent three days unexpectedly in Seattle on business. Give me a bit to catch up on the thread, which—after some skimming—appears to be about ninety percent arrogant posturing from you and about ten percent you continuing to attempt to learn science.
Welcome back.  Looking forward to your insight.

Offline bknight

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #355 on: December 12, 2024, 12:57:20 PM »
najak, I'm curious how you became a CT?  What initiated it in your past?  Have you ever considered that you are wrong?  Or has your hard headed conviction that "I'm right no matter what anyone shows me" bars any one from showing proofs that you are wrong, but it does not matter to you, because "you are right". 
Truth needs no defense.  Nobody can take those footsteps I made on the surface of the moon away from me.
Eugene Cernan

Offline JayUtah

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #356 on: December 12, 2024, 06:35:00 PM »
Welcome back.  Looking forward to your insight.

Thanks. You've been busy learning things in my absence. That's legitimately encouraging. However, before we go over your homework, there is some housekeeping I feel we need to address. Reviewing this thread with fresh eyes, I think three points deserve attention, which I will address in three posts beginning with this one.

First, just in the past few days :—
@JayUTAH:
@Jay - you could have
Jay isn't...
The proof that Jay needs to make now...
If Jay had...
Jay is...
But if Jay will do it...
@JayUTAH - so do you
Jay can prove he's professional, by...
I'm getting pissy, because Jay...
@JayUTAH - Yoohoo.   Coming back any time soon?
Jay hasn't solved...
* * *
If this is not the case, Jay should...
Or if not -- Jay, the expert -- should...
* * *
I'm awaiting next Steps from Jay...
@JayUTAH - yoohoo.
@JayUTAH - it's been 3 days since your last response.
@JayUTAH - please give us some sort of update or progress report?  I'd like to know if you are working on this at all?  ETA?

You have developed an unhealthy personal fixation on me. It ends today—understood? My first priority in life is my family. That is not negotiable. My next priority is my business; people depend on me to do things for them that only I can do. None of your activity here rises anywhere close to that level of justifiable dependence on me. Next come many other things in my personal life that are none of your business.

This forum and all others like it are a hobby for me, nothing more. I don't owe you any accounting of my time, priorities, or any other parameter of my participation in this thread. Don't even slightly pretend that I do. I agreed to help you put some numbers to the ideas mentioned in this thread, which I will continue to do. I'm not on the hook to provide some monumental proof for you that the industry is somehow thirsting for and which only I can provide. To a person, every person in my industry accepts the authenticity of the Apollo missions as a fact beyond rational doubt. You need to get over yourself, and you need to get over me. You obsessed over Bob Braeunig as a person and now you're obsessing over me as a person. You will get very little future cooperation from me until you dispense with your ongoing sick fixation.
"Facts are stubborn things." --John Adams

Offline JayUtah

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #357 on: December 12, 2024, 06:38:25 PM »
Welcome back.  Looking forward to your insight.

Next item on the housekeeping list (and closely related your personal fixation) is posturing. Yes, a certain amount of it is inevitable in a lively debate, but you're trying to make it an art form.

I know his tactic, as we just saw again -- I answer, and he responds with a dozen pedantic questions, trying to paint the picture (which all here will believe) that he's smarter than me... and therefore must be right.
* * *
It hasn't been debunked, because it cannot be debunked.  And Jay either knows this (and is deceiving you) or he's not as smart as you all think he is.
Jay isn't dumb enough to be this "bad of a teacher"...   it's a clear posturing maneuver.
I'm identifying the unproductive nature of what Jay is calling "teaching", but rather is designed to produce "reasons to discredit me later (or now)".  So rather than having real discussions, the focus will be on "but look at a how wrong you were" - which is non-productive to truth - and only productive for posturing later.
Are you a good aeronautical engineer?  Your maturity level here doesn't reflect it.   Are you young?  old?   Single?  Grumpy?   Or you just like sports - and smack talk?
Jay is dragging this out - it takes a lot longer for him to try and question me to death -- than it would to "just provide this FIRST EVER proof" that is lacking in the world.
I do believe [Jay]'s got some professional experience.  But my life experience is that he's giving off the signs of being one who seeks to elevate themself above what is actually realistic.

Let's pause a moment in the litany to address this, since you went into detail in the same post. You wrote :—

When Jay said knowing the "Inertial Moment" of the LM/AM is "utterly irrelevant" - he exposed IGNORANCE.  He later called it an "optimization" -- no, it's "Crucial" - therefore Apollo cares VERY DEEPLY about this calculation, to generate the best-possible "initial guess" in an environment where "high speed feedback loops are slower and problematic".

This made HIM look bad.   It's why he doesn't answer questions...

You have a vastly different recollection of that discussion than I do. First of all, there's no such thing as "Inertial Moment," nor did I recall saying any such thing. You may be referring to moment of inertia. When you posted the excerpt from the Apollo Flight Journal where the estimates of spacecraft mass were being read down to the LM, I took that seriously at face value. I went to the MIT design documents to determine why they included it in the model. Then I went to the computer code for the LGC to determine how it was being used—a routine, I'll add, that you managed to skip over in your hasty perusal of the code from which you managed to conclude that the code wouldn't work.

Armed with that understanding, I addressed your claim completely. Yes, it's always merely an optimization in the general control law. However, in certain specific cases such as docked versus undocked maneuvering, the code does determine whether to operate the jets continuously or whether to "pulse" them, since they're sized to be able to maneuver the whole stack if necessary. You never answered why the CSM mass would have been important for the LGC to know, but I told you why. I gave you a thorough response, which you completely ignored and declared that the subject was closed unless you were given another thread.

Predictably you cooked up a reason right out of the AI why initial guesses can and should sometimes be attempted, and tried to throw in irrelevant stuff like weight and balance charts. But you pontificated that answer as necessarily true in all cases and completely ignored what I said. Then, as now, you make up reasons why you think I disagreed with you.

Okay, moving on...

But, I believe "He won't, because he Can't".  I'd love to see him prove me wrong.
Now say you find 10 major flaws in the Bible - what seem to be huge to you.   But you aren't allowed to raise these issues among the Christians.

Just stop all the posturing. It's childish, immature, and unproductive. You've made it absolutely plain that you think you're the smartest guy in the room and that you're the bodybuilder justified in claiming to be stronger than average. It's simply not important for you to remind everyone in every post that you're convinced everyone else is faking it.

As much as you want to draw attention to the alleged purity of your reasons, you have made it fairly clear recently that your attacks on Apollo are just an attempt to relive the glory days of when you took down some sort of financial scheme. This is obviously personal for you, and it is greatly impairing your ability to give credit to others who are freely volunteering their time to help you understand why your claims aren't as meritorious as you believe.
"Facts are stubborn things." --John Adams

Offline JayUtah

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #358 on: December 12, 2024, 06:48:40 PM »
Welcome back.  Looking forward to your insight.

Final item on the housekeeping agenda: my approach and method. I still believe this statement to be true :—

My "tactic" is called the Socratic method of teaching. I can just tell you what's what, but history has shown that you will just sidestep it, ignore it, and move on to the next knee-jerk claim. Instead I'm helping you teach yourself.

I acknowledge that you have written as follows :—

@Jay - you could have easily said this in 5 seconds, and I would have learned it just as well with 100x less time.   I suspect your goal is to "school me", not "teach me".
If Jay had corrected my premise regarding the "Law of Conservation of Energy", I would have conceded on that instantly...
I spent hours learning something that should have taken seconds, simply because I didn't think I was "missing something easy but vital".
Ever since I realized my stupid "Conservation of Energy" wildcard was a dud, I've spent time going down the more complex path (would have done this sooner with a small correction).
Or if not -- Jay, the expert -- should simply say "you ALSO need to add in this other factor/concept"... and I will.

But I simply don't believe it. Your entire tenure at this forum is characterized with your refusal to accept plainly shown facts. Even when I suggested that you couldn't just ignore the heat term as you did, you dug in and tried to reverse the burden of proof. And that came after a long period where you insisted you didn't need to start with an energy balance equation. The notion that you'll simply accept what your critics here tell you is preposterous and completely out of keeping with the evidence.

While we're on this topic, let's be abundantly clear: You need to stop blaming other people for your lack of preparation. When you can demonstrate being as tenacious in challenging your own beliefs and assumptions as you are in challenging those you disagree with, then you can place blame. Until then, people are having to waste time bringing to your attention facts you should have known already or been able to look up yourself. No, we aren't letting you persist in error so that we can just make more hay out of it later. You persist in your errors for exactly as long as you desire to.

I taught engineering at the college level for a short time before going into professional practice, and I was fairly highly reviewed by my students. And yes, I'm quite accustomed to the trope of what the law professors call the "gunners," the students who think they know more than the instructor and are quite willing to waste a lot of class time trying to show that from positions of considerable ignorance. And yes, the Socratic method is the proper approach to turn what might start out as a, "Get out of my classroom!" moment into a true teaching moment. You don't seem to want to challenge your own assumptions until you're given a reason that rises higher than, "Some guy on ApolloHoax said so."

It's feeling more and more like he's just trying to get a free education at Jay's expense. 

If the guy had any integrity he'd provide his address so Jay could invoice him for tutoring services.

If that were true then I'd be charging you all a fee. :D

I will probably return to teaching when I retire from practice. Why? Because there's nothing more satisfying than the look on a student's face when they finally solve a problem that's been vexing them, and do so with full understanding of how the solution works. This stuff is hard. I do like teaching. But my ability and desire to do so in this forum is obviously limited.

I am a teacher, and one of the challenges of the profession is identifying exactly where in a complex process a student is having a misunderstanding. There are a lot of different ways to reach even the same wrong answer sometimes, and finding the exact issue is an important step toward providing the targeted instruction that will lead the student to the most thorough understanding.

This. What non-teachers don't understand is that there are some classic and traditional ways to misunderstand commonly misunderstood subjects. Thermodynamics, orbital mechanics, and electrodynamics are just a few examples from my fields. When we teach those, we learn to recognize the signs of those specific misunderstandings and try to find the right way to dispel them. When the student is reluctant, the way that certainly does not work is simply telling them they're wrong. A student that begins a discussion with the firm belief that they cannot possibly be wrong will never drop that until things they are led to learn make them say, "Oh, I see now how I was wrong." No, that's not amplified in this case to make lots of rhetorical hay out of someone's mistakes. But the lesson you learn that way should be clear—your hubris is your own worst enemy. You keep insisting that I'm going to rub your nose it something, but if you paid attention you'd realize I'm not.

Socratic method is best employed AFTER someone has demonstrated the inability to learn a concept.  It is NOT APPROPRIATE for use in conveying simple theories or pointing out "you missed something there" (which would have been immediately well-received). So using it as your FIRST METHOD - is simply for "avoidance and posturing".

The Socratic method works best when people have arrived at their beliefs via a failure to think critically on their own. It focuses on exposing weaknesses in the underlying assumptions in ways that are difficult to refute by simply sidestepping them. It is singularly successful because it requires the other party to think about questions and come up with answers.

If a student of yours is trying to make a proof, but is simply omitting a simple, but crucial concept -- do you deliberately let them go on and on for a long time - THEN tell them about it, after they've made a fool of themselves?   Or do you simply "offer the correction as you notice it" so that they can benefit from the "2nd set of eyes" much more quickly, and start being more productive quicker?  I'd like to know which type of teacher you are.

I'd like to know what kind of student you are, because that approach has been tried by others in your other threads and has not succeeded. You assiduously do not incorporate new revelations of fact or technique into your thinking. You just move on to the next knee-jerk reason for rejecting it.

Quote
I corrected myself, and was pissed because I'm certain that Jay saw my error a day earlier.  His motives are not well-meaning "teaching".  He's trying to win a debate here, not solve a problem.

I'm trying to teach you to solve a problem you should have solved for yourself before even coming to this forum. You started with the knee-jerk answer that nothing you read on Bob Braeunig's site could be relied upon because he was not an expert, and that therefore Apollo "broke basic physics." Quite a number of people told you that this was because your understanding of physics was incomplete, but you would have none of that. Most of the rest of this debate—which you are obviously trying to win rather than solving a problem—has been you continuously setting onerous tasks for everyone else. You're "pissy" because I'm making you do work you should have done already.

I saw the error in your reasoning when you first asked this :—

So which claim are you suggesting:
1. The engine only operates at 60% efficiency in steady state?
2. Or that we can Break the Law of Conservation of Energy

Why do you think I asked you where that figure came from? Had you answered that question instead of trying to spring a cross-examination "Gotcha!" moment on you, we would have arrived much earlier at the energy balance equation and much earlier to your error in considering only kinetic energy in the balance equation. You persist in error exactly as long as you desire to.

But I had an inkling of what it might be when you posted this, many pages prior :—

I made a claim that "all other references I could find tend to say that Thrust at Launch is LOWER due to the exhaust being constrained...

I asked you where that 60% came from not because I wondered, but because I already knew where it came from and I figured you were ignoring pressure thrust (as so many sources largely do, including Sutton & Biblarz). That's why I was so keen to have you write the energy balance equation so we could uncover your assumption that heat could be ignored. Now could I have told you all of this declaratively? Yes, and I did. Every time I tried to raise the subject of what the sources of thrust were, you fell back to the incorrect understanding that increased pressure impeded and therefore lowered thrust, and conflated the notion of chamber pressure and exit plane pressure.

So no. Straightening you out is not simply a matter of telling you the things you're getting wrong and expecting you to abide by that. My method is working, and I have shown proof that it is and proof for why it's necessary. I will not be changing my approach, so you might as well stop whining about it now.

First, it gives them the opportunity to discover their own error, which is a good opportunity for me to reassess their understanding of the concept in general. Second, it gives me an opportunity to try to understand their error in the full context of the problem so I can try to better understand their thought process and help them most efficiently by targeting their specific needs once we get to breaking down their work.

This is exactly what I have practiced in this thread. The opportunity for a student to discover their own error is coupled with their joy in having done so, and (ideally) the motive to do more of that in the future. The Socratic method is a systematic way of unraveling the assumptions upon which a conclusion is based, but in a way that permits the student to discover and take ownership of it and not just copy or parrot the reasoning of the teacher.

Quote
I agree that Jay may have seen that specific error much earlier, but you make so many that he may legitimately not have been certain which error or errors you were making. I don't believe your assessments of his motives are accurate. My read on the whole exchange is that Jay is actually interested in showing you how to find the answer rather than just providing it.

I am, for the reasons I already articulated. I see the arguments in so many of the other threads failing to make headway precisely because the claimant is allowed to dismiss inconvenient facts simply because they "belong" to someone else. I wanted you, Najak, the claimant to write out the energy balance equation not to rub your nose in what was perhaps your initial inability to do so, but so that you would own the concept. And in your having done so, I was provided with a framework that you had bought into and could then be shown the right answer in a way that wouldn't be just dismissed with your prior handwaving such as, "But PRESSURE means LESS THRUST"—a concept you can now put into better perspective.

What is your objection to a "Teacher-student" relationship with someone who is a qualified expert in their field and you are a self-proclaimed rookie? An intellectually honest person would be grateful that someone is investing time and energy to help them understand this complex material.

Stepping away from addressing Najak directly, it's clear the relationship he wants is more akin to that between a witness and opposing counsel. He wants to cross-examine the facts into irrelevancy, discredit the witness, and make something that sounds good for a lay jury—but doesn't actually get at the problem. He wants the answer to be simple and easily-digestible. He doesn't want to learn any rocket science and has stated as much. He's only interested in a showy fly-by that minimizes the effort he has to put into the problem.

I will not be changing my approach.
"Facts are stubborn things." --John Adams

Offline JayUtah

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #359 on: December 12, 2024, 07:04:07 PM »
These posts seem to me to be in conflict.

I care very little for the "rocket science" I'm learning now as it presents no gains for me in my life.
* * *
If you think I want to Learn Rocket Science at the lowest levels, you haven't been reading my posts.

I'm far less enthralled with "the Moon and Space" than I am with "the manner in which govt's establish control over the people, manufacture narratives, and make use of propaganda, legally, for these purposes -- simply by tying it to a war effort or national threat".

Physics is important to me, and I want to discuss it, to completion (where both sides have said their piece, leaving not much else to be said).

Would you please write a few words to reconcile them?

Specifically, I cannot see how you can discuss the physics "to completion" without also delving into the underlying sciences to sufficient depth to achieve that completion. Further, you say you're more interested in power structures and control of the narrative by untrustworthy actors than you are in the underlying principles of space travel. How can you properly assess the validity of the space-travel narrative if you first keep drawing knee-jerk conclusions about it on the basis of perfunctory and inexpert analysis? Doesn't that make you the untrustworthy narrator? If so, how then can it be your "calling" to enlighten the masses?
"Facts are stubborn things." --John Adams