Repeating your claims anew does not unwind the previous 15 pages of discussion.
But it does emphasize that nobody has answered the challenge.
Even if you believe the spacesuits and sublimators work as claimed, you should want the demonstration I describe so that you can KNOW they work as claimed.
I'm puzzled by everyone's reluctance to demand a demo.
Is believing you're right so much better than knowing the truth?
Neil, as I've tried to discuss earlier, even if, for some reason, I didn't think spacesuits worked, I wouldn't find the demo you described remotely convincing, and I'm baffled* as to why you would.
"In a single test, three independent viewers agreed this worked!" is NOT convincing proof. It is, in fact, a ridiculously minimal amount of evidence. It is
laughable. Just imagine that for a moment in any other situation:
"Buy our product! THREE people say it works!"
Indeed, I would actually suspect that a claim of "three people claim it works" is almost certainly trying to conceal something. If it really worked, they wouldn't have to settle for three measly people.
On the other hand, I am rather convinced, in fact, by "thousands of experts and people who's jobs and lives depend on this all agree that it works". Especially when there's continued agreement across multiple countries and multiple generations. Especially when there's clear and direct evidence that could only be produced by having it work.
Further, as I alluded to earlier, if an organization was corrupt and carrying out a massive fraud, it would be utterly insane to request a demonstration from that organization to prove they were not a fraud.
Of course they would fake it.
* OK, honestly, no, I'm not really baffled. I've got a pretty good idea why you've chosen this approach. But if I were to give you the benefit of the doubt, I'd be baffled.