I worked in the space program in the 1960's on the Atlas and Titan boosters and later with Boeing. I was a participant and firsthand witness...
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For the bright people on this forum (most of them more knowledgeable in space sciences and astrophysics than I), it's like trying to educate a lamp post.
Well, don't sell yourself short. Firsthand knowledge and experience with space engineering is important and valuable. It's especially valuable because people like
allancw tend to approach space science (or whatever they're claiming is a hoax) as if it were some high-priesthood profession practiced only by a few special, privileged people who (in the conspiracist's estimation) don't deserve their lofty station nor the accolades of society. In fact it's just a job like any other, and it's not uncommon to meet and talk with people who practice it whereupon you realize they're normal people just like anyone else -- not some Manchurian candidate, hapless pawn in a global power struggle, nor nefarious oppressor.
I think that we've probably seen the last of Mr Weisbecker. He's had his arse handed to him on a plate.
Unfortunately he had his arse handed to him pretty much upon his arrival. He didn't recognize or accept it then, so I don't expect him to recognize and accept it now. He never paid serious attention to any of the answers he was given, and he won't pay any attention to any future ones.
I expect that he'll go back to telling anyone in earshot that he has written a few mediocre books (hey, 350 reviews on Amazon!), writing crank letters to physicists and trying to flog his plot of land in Costa Ric[a]
I'm sure he did that before coming here, that he's been doing so all along, and will continue to do so long after he loses interest in us. The statements he's made here and elsewhere indicate that he's essentially groping for whatever semblance of credibility and stature he can attain using his means.
Its a funny thing...I think that people like this have such a belief in their own ego that they can never broker any idea that they might be incorrect.
In my opinion this sort of overwhelming belief in one's own ego is actually a paradoxical symptom of low self-esteem. This type of person usually goes overboard hyping himself because deep down he's fundamentally insecure and believes people will judge him harshly and reject him. Often there's no rational reason for it; the individual is usually -- for lack of a better word -- just fine. However, it is obvious that efforts to amplify one's apparent greatness and prowess would be intolerant to criticism or evidence of error.
To have on the screen, right in front of them, the answers to the questions they asked (multiple times) and then insist that the answers have not been provided... It really baffles me.
As I pointed out, this conversation is a rhetorical exercise meant to bolster faith in the construct I described above.
Allancw entered the discussion with the "guarantee" that we could not find what he said he wanted. The exercise had already been laid out: the outcome in his mind was foregone. He'll simply do or say whatever is needed to keep making the premise of the exercise true.