If I had a freshman thermo class, the question I'd ask them in the course is, how would you cool a spacesuit in the vacuum of space if you had nothing to conduct to, nothing to convect to and no radiator?
No radiator? Isn't that what a sublimator is? A device to radiate heat?
How can you say a spacesuit with a sublimator has no radiator?
Well, a radiator is something that rejects heat via radiative heat transfer. Car "radiators" are really convective heat exchangers. The notion that there's "no radiator" in space is absolutely ludicrous. We don't typically use water-operator porous plate sublimators on long-term missions because they require a consumable supply of water. The most typical phase-change heat sink in space engineering uses paraffin as the phase-susceptible material. There are closed-cycle paraffin exchangers and open-cycle ones, typically reserved for emergencies. Radiation is the most common method of rejecting heat aboard a spacecraft.
For spacesuits, the radiator assembly would be cumbersome. And since EVAs are time-bounded for other reasons (e.g., astronaut fatigue), it's perfectly acceptable to use a highly efficient heat reject method that nevertheless requires a replenishable consumable -- cooling water.
Thermodynamics is not the same as heat transfer. If I were teaching a freshman thermodynamics course and some freshman said in class that porous plate sublimators couldn't work, he'd be going home that night with a very hefty homework assignment. Note that Baker, for all his bluster, has evaded every single request to show from a thermodynamics or heat transfer standpoint, complete with equations etc., that his claim has merit in the physical sciences.
That's because he can't, and he knows he can't. He just needs to stir up enough doubt by handwaving at test protocols to plausibly (to laymen) accuse NASA of lying. Then he can, as he as stated is his aim, try to say that the government also lied about 9/11.