A person who closes his mind to the acceptance of new ideas and facts is almost always an person of low intelligence who believes based on faith and not evidence.
But you'd be wrong to assume that's what we do, and that this is how we arrived at our conclusions. First, most of us have been presented with these "new ideas" (which are, in fact, the same old hoax suppositions repeated over and over again) many, many times. After having researched them suitably, we have arrived at a reasoned judgment. Being open to the idea doesn't mean accepting it without testing it.
Second, you haven't presented any new ideas. You say you have them, but we're apparently not worthy to receive them. How can you know whether we're open to your new ideas unless you present them?
I am the opposite, and by questioning what i am told I CAN alter the human collective conscious, which I feel is critical at this point in human history.
So you personally are going to save humanity by your alteration of the collective consciousness?
It is impossible for me to prove a negative such as "NASA did not send 12 men to the moon in the last century".
You're not being asked to prove that negative. You're being asked to prove the
affirmative statement that all the evidence for Apollo was faked. That was your claim, and that's what you're being asked to prove.
This is because no matter what evidence I present that it is impossible for it to have happened as claimed, persons like you can easily just move the goalposts and deny what has been proved.
But that's just pure presumption. You aren't as open-minded as you seem to believe.
This is why science works in the opposite manner.
The affirmative evidence in favor of Apollo has been presented and is widely available. You say you can rebut it, but you refuse to do so. How is that even remotely scientific?
What I can do is cast enough doubt on the integrity of those telling me that...
So your stated intent is to poison the well?
I can convince anyone with a logical mind who applies deductive reasoning and common sense to his conclusions that it is nearly certain it did not happen.
Do it, then.