I stand by my claim, as I've repeatedly said, that It's impossible to know if the claims in the book (that the author believes he was visited by Neil Armstrongs ghost) is true or not. Unlikely maybe, but not impossible.
Nice horse-changing parenthetical. Those aren't the claims we're talking about, and we've said so several times. It has also been noted several times how you keep returning to
that question -- and that question only -- anytime someone attempts to bring up the
testable claims from the book.
His testable claims are that (1) he played golf with the mortal Neil Armstrong at a military-only golf course in 1969 on the day he was supposed to be on the Moon, and (2) that he was granted a degree in physics by St Andrews University by showing how the Moon landings would be impossible.
Do you believe it is impossible to know if
those claims are true or not?
I've engaged the subject of the thread plenty. I asked for literature on the moon landings hoax theory. I was linked some. I said thank you and offered some feedback on one of them.
And only that
one (despite all attempts to solicit otherwise from you), and on grounds that are not pertinent to this forum. Your "feedback" was an opinion of its value judged solely from an entertainment perspective, an insinuation that criticism against it was ill-founded, and an assertion that it was somehow immune from critical analysis.
Then I'm called whining for defending myself from those attacks? lovely.
That's all you do anymore: defend yourself from all those evil people who are out to get you, supposedly just for expressing your opinion. Those several people -- including me -- have asked you several on-topic questions hoping to drag the discussion back to tractable questions that are allowed in this forum. So far you haven't acknowledged any of them.