Neil,
You never answered the questions or addressed the points I raised
here and
here. Nor did you answer
my question as to why you are going out of your way to remain ignorant on this subject.
It doesn't really matter, since your motivations are pretty plain, and you still haven't attempted to learn anything about the subject since then, and clearly aren't about to start. But there are a couple of things worth pointing out.
I think I understand why most engineers lack integrity or courage... And also, they might just be rotten people inside (I've met a few of those)...
It can be observed in this thread with most resorting to the desperate measures of name calling, insults and attempted defamation of character after retreating into a metaphysical black hole of self-delusion about “morality” of all things...
I am not interested in what you claim someone else said about morality. I will, however, note that you chastise others for "name calling, insults, and attempted defamations of character" after saying they "lack integrity or courage", "might just be rotten people inside", and are "self-delu[ded]". That is amusingly hypocritical. But that's not your real problem here; most people are hypocritical now and then, even though you are making it a full-time hobby.
You are demonstrably ignorant of space operations, spaceflight hardware testing, and human space flight in general. But that's not your real problem, either. Lots of people don't know anything about spaceflight.
Your research skills are abysmally poor. You posted lengthy descriptions about how you pestered people and companies (including "Hamilton Sunstrand
[sic]"; you could at least try to get the name right), and searched and searched, and yet somehow you couldn't find reams of engineering documentation that other people were able to turn up in minutes. But that's not your main problem, either. Lots of people are lousy researchers.
Bizarrely, when people served up all this information you said didn't exist, you ignored it; then you denied it; then you sort-of admitted it by greasing up your goalposts and shooting them off into the sunset; and now you've gone back to denying it. That
is a problem; it shows you're not willing to admit you're wrong. I don't understand how brittle your worldview must be, that because of your beliefs and opinions, you have to flat-out reject evidence that threatens even one single part of it. I can't help you with that; I'm an engineer, not a psychologist. But that's only your penultimate problem anyway.
One of the Professional Obligations listed in the Code of Ethics of the National Society of Professional Engineers is: ...
I'm glad you see fit to quote from this Code. And because I'm an engineer, and you keep proclaiming your superiority to the other engineers you claim to be lackeys and sellouts and whatnot, I will tell you what your real problem is in engineering terms. From the
NSPE Code of Ethics for Engineers:
II.3. Engineers shall issue public statements only in an objective and truthful manner.
b. Engineers may express publicly technical opinions that are founded upon knowledge of the facts and competence in the subject matterYour real problem here, right here in this thread and captured for whoever cares to read it, is that
you represent yourself as an engineer on a topic in which you are not competent. Are you a registered professional engineer? Because if so,
you are in direct violation of the NSPE Code of Ethics. Will you self-report, or do we need to do it for you?
A corollary problem is that you keep trying to extrapolate your personal incompetence to others:
I read your responses here to there being nothing that could reasonably convince any responsible engineer that a spacesuit or sublimator had ever been in a vacuum chamber since 1966 and I’m creeped out even more. Stop trying to win so much and focus on the truth. You don’t KNOW anything that I don’t KNOW and I don’t KNOW anything. A faith-based space program is unacceptable. Repent for your engineering sins; demand NASA be accountable...
I will grant you that you don't know anything about spaceflight. The rest is just silly posturing. I have direct personal experience with the people and systems and organizations you try to impugn, and you have no idea what you are talking about. I have worked with a fair number of the astronauts who have used the suits you say are impossible, and engineers who designed hardware some of them used to repair the Hubble telescope. I've worked with Apollo engineers and Apollo-era astronauts. I work with the people who keep healthy the large space station you comically assert is a giant balloon. I work with engineers every day whose job is to get it right, and to say when things are wrong.
You can plug your ears and shut your eyes and keep repeating "absurd!" and "faith!" all you want, but outside your head your heroic engineering fantasy reads as just another layman ranting about something he not only
doesn't understand, but
refuses to understand - yet, you presume to lecture others about accountability. That's not even irksome; it's merely pathetic.