Interesting that he has a picture of David Chin (presumably), but not anything dating back to the period in question.
He presents no artifacts of any kind to substantiate that he played golf at Navy Marine Golf Course in 1969. Burns claims to be an avid, expert golfer and a member of the Royal and Ancient. Golfers are enthusiastic souvenir keepers, and Burns seems to be no exception. If I travel from here in Utah to play at St. Andrews, you can bet I'll be keeping my scorecard. Yet here is Neil Burns, the golfers' golfer, being invited to play unexpectedly in a competition at an exclusive Hawaii golf course, and even winning the competition. Yet he didn't keep the scorecard, or anything else.
He alludes to artifacts that supposedly
could be produced, but aren't. The infamous visitor's book, into which the "three military men" signed him in as a guest, is mentioned a few times. But Burns never sees it. In fact, Burns never asks to see it. Nor does he even ascertain that any such book exists. He says Armstrong gave him some of his monogrammed golf balls, but he apparently cannot produce them today. He says one of the crew paid for a new pair of golf shorts for him, charging it to his account. Burns would later discover in his golf bag a scorecard from Mauna Kea signed by his three friends. But he cannot produce this either. Something like an authenticated set of signatures on an official course scorecard would not only substantiate Burns' story but also be worth something north of $5,000 on the autograph market.
The only substantiation he produces for visiting the golf course in 2013 are the two photographs. One purports to be him with David Chin. I'm reasonably certain the person identified as Chin really is him. The other person is somewhat credible as the author. The About the Author section at Jockndoris contains a photograph of Burns at evidently a substantially younger age. The man in the book's photo is considerably older and has facial hair. General features, pattern baldness, and so forth are reasonably congruent. They are standing just inside the door of a modern facility, on a rug showing the course seal. Some aspects of the seal as depicted in the photograph suggest it may be a digital modification, but it is difficult to separate those artifacts from ordinary spatial quantization -- I would need to see the original photo in order to validate it. Secondary characteristics such as photos of navy officers in the background and desk paraphernalia suggest this is a military office. Based on that, it's reasonable to conclude Burns met Chin at a building associated with the course.
The second photo is of a plaque giving what appears to be an historical timeline of the course. The green awning along the top edge matches the green awning seen in the posed photo. This suggests it was taken in the same room. The name of the course is barely visible in the photo. No people or distinctive scenery appear in this photo to identify where and when it was taken.
Burns claims to have taken photos of golfers teeing, but he does not reproduce them. We know from modern reviews that non-military people are allowed on some premises of the course, if only to ascertain that it is not public and that they will not be admitted. Hence it is reasonable to believe that Burns was in one such building associated with the club, that Chin met him there and posed for a photo, but that Burns was not permitted any further.
Most of the narrative Burns proposes for his 2013 visit to the course is in the form of a time-travel episode back to 1969, guided by Ghost Armstrong.
May I entertain myself with the idea that Jock did, indeed, write a paper in the early 60's saying a moon landing was impossible, and his book is a flimsy attempt to justify that he was actually right?
I don't get that impression. "Jock" (i.e., Andrew Neil Burns) writes mostly about ghosts from history. This time I think he just got too close to history that too many of his readers know well enough. Ghosts are his thing. There's a feeble disclaimer at the bottom of page 8: "Those of you who do not believe in ghosts should stop reading now because you will only become cross and frustrated." The problem is that even if you do believe in ghosts, the ghosts in this book are obviously, clumsily fabricated.
I think it's likely that the "physics thesis" is largely fabricated as well, meaning there may be a nugget of truth behind it but it has been fairly evidently inflated. It's conceivable that Burns believed at the time that travel to the Moon was impossible, but this "Physics degree" claim lands like a blob of icky tar in the middle of an otherwise pristine meadow of chartered accountancy. After studying physics at St. Andrews for a number a years and allegedly earning a degree in it, suddenly his father apprentices him to an accounting firm and this becomes his entire life thereafter. Kennedy's challenge came, he says, during his "final year of his BSc" degree, but then he describes 1963 being his final year of the "Physics degree." Barring some obscure British educational practice of which I'm unaware, his timeline doesn't fit.
I don't think the book was written to justify the thesis. I think the thesis was fabricated or embellished in order to justify the book. Ghost Armstrong still needs a premise for the hoax, and the standard premise is that Moon missions were impossible. But how to establish that?
Voilà, the suddenly brilliant physics thesis he must have written.
In one scene, Burns the brilliant student writes (what he claims is) a masterful expert analysis of the U.S. space program. But in a subsequent scene he has abandoned all interest in U.S. space travel, is busy writing Quick Basic programs to revolutionize the art of accounting, and is living in Cape Town, South Africa where -- "naturally" -- he is completely cut off from television or international news and thus completely unable to recognize the three most famous people in the world in 1969 as they step onto his airliner in Fiji.
Nor, upon arriving in Hawaii, does he take a moment to sit down with 600 million other people the first Moon landing on television. You know -- that thing a scant 6 years before he said could never happen, and for which saying he was awarded a Physics degree. Well, it was happening, and we have to believe Burns was uninterested. Even Ghost Armstrong said that on the day they (he, Aldrin, Collins, and our author) arrived in Hawaii, "everybody who had access to a television was watching." Everyone, of course, except Burns.
All that has to be the case so that you believe he doesn't recognize the Apollo 11 crew as they cavort freely around the Hawaiian islands playing golf. You have to believe that Burns emerges from his African sequestration to discover that the brilliant cornerstone of his Physics degree is now being overturned, and he doesn't do what Ghost Armstrong says everyone else was doing.
Well, Burns needs to think carefully before writing personal letters to critics. In his letter he writes, "We all held our fingers and cheered when it was shown on television..."
So now he says he
did watch it. And yet somehow it took him 40 years to figure out that the people he was watching on television
that day claim to land on the Moon were the people he says he was playing golf with,
that day.