Here's a question for the HBs to ponder:
Let's say that you're a member of the National Guard. You are called up to active duty and deployed to, say, Afghanistan. Six months later you return home. One or two of your neighbors, for whatever reason, express doubt that you were in Afghanistan or that you were even called up at all. They contend that you could have been in another city or, for that matter, holed up in a motel across town. You just claim to have been called up to increase your "heroism" quotient, maybe to impress the ladies a bit. Photos published in the local newspaper of you deployed with your unit make no impression - they could easily have been faked.
Now here's the question. How seriously are you going to take these people? Are you going to put a lot of effort into convincing them, or are you basically going to shrug them off as self-deluded?
Do you see the comparison I'm making? It's easy to say, well, it could have been this, or it could have been that, but speculating about what could possibly maybe perchance theoretically have happened doesn't make it so, or even likely.
Come see us when you have some actual credible evidence that so-and-so happened, not that it might have happened. If you have something solid, I guarantee you we'll listen.