Yep, he hit a nerve all right, but not the nerve you think.
Indeed, it's almost like the reaction of a person who is suspected of being in cahoots somehow with another poster and spends page after page bellyaching about it. It's almost as if we struck a nerve. What nefarious conclusions could we read into that? What kind
should we?
Yeah, when a man half your age and twice your size physically confronts you and repeatedly accuses you on camera of fraud without any shred of credible evidence, expecting a calm, articulate response is just daft. Sibrel certainly wasn't very calm himself, and he admitted later that he was responsible for provoking Aldrin's response.
Aldrin acted with restraint and tried to ignore Bart Sibrel (a convicted criminal) by walking away from him.
Technically at that time Sibrel had not been convicted of anything, but it's relevant to mention that his criminal conviction later was for jumping up and down on a woman's car while he was working as a taxi cab driver. The record shows Sibrel to be a physically belligerent person with poor impulse control. Odd how Skeptic_UK doesn't take that into account when accusing Aldrin of "just resort[ing] to violence."
Sibrel tried to press charges against Aldrin, but the L.A. county prosecutor laughed Sibrel out of his office.
That might have been the end of it until Sibrel publicly called him "liar and a coward".
Sibrel's legal fate was sealed the moment he poked Aldrin with the Bible. Under U.S. law that's considered battery (however inconsequential the "attack"), and his actions up until that point might have constituted assault. Aldrin was largely within his legal right at that point to defend himself with physical force.
As I've said before, Groklaw once had the complaint that Sibrel swore against Aldrin for the L.A. County prosecutor. It was most revealing and I wish I had saved it. Sibrel swore under oath that his plan was to lure Aldrin into a paid interview to discuss his Apollo mission, and then to accuse him on camera of taking an honorarium for something he never did and video his reaction. He was then going to follow up by asking Aldrin to swear on the Bible, as he did with many of the other astronauts.
There is no incentive for any of the Apollo crews to cooperate with Bart Sibrel in any way. Hence many did not. He gives no indication that he intends to treat the Apollo astronauts fairly. Sibrel does not generally discuss those Apollo astronauts who
did swear on the Bible that they walked on the Moon. (Sibrel contrives an oath variously referring to the Bible and to "treason," although it's not clear what treasonous act any of the astronauts could possibly have committed in connection with Apollo.) He concentrates only on those who refuse to give him ammunition. His treatment is decidedly one-sided: Al Bean is supposedly sweating under Sibrel's withering cross examination, but no explanation is given for why Sibrel is also sweating. Might it be that the interview was shot outdoors in hot weather?