Questioning the evidence itself is where madness lies.
I hope you never get accused one day based on false evidence. Because your lawyer will have a hard time with your defense.
If all my lawyer offers is "I don't believe he did it, & besides that, I don't think the technology he had access to would allow him to do it", I'll start getting used to the idea of wearing a stylish orange suit.
Questioning the evidence is everyday practice in whatever investigation, be it legal, forensic, scientific, academic, journalistic, etc.
The landing on the moon is a fact like any other and is not above scrutiny.
OK, but the evidence for "faking it" must stand up to scrutiny as well.
As it universally consists of vague feelings based increasingly as time progresses on ignorance, it fails any serious scrutiny.
Going back to the OP, who didn't know there were multiple trips to the Moon, we see this lack of knowledge played out.
He then compounds it by saying "It seems technically impossible".
There seems to be a widespread belief amongst those born much more recently, that technology was "primitive & unreliable in the 1960s.
They state that, without one bit of supporting evidence, then build a magnificent edifice on that suspect foundation.
We have "Sending them to almost certain death" putting in an appearance, based upon that original supposition.
In fact, NASA was fairly confident that the Moon landing would be successful.
This is what I call the "Von Daniken" school of debate.
You make some way out suggestion, then say:-" Because of this, this happened, then that, then that, hopefully losing the reader in a huge pile of "evidence" which is nothing of the sort.
Do some research on the Internet on "Moon hoax", & you find yourself rapidly spiralling down the rabbit hole to "nutville".
We find such luminaries as the lady who supposedly saw a "coke bottle" in the coverage of the Apollo 11 moonwalk.
This same lady remembered this as happening at night, when she lived in Western Australia.
The problem is, the Moon walk took place in the mid morning WAST.
There are definitely people who may not really believe, but have a financial interest in maintaining the conspiracy theory, although they are pretty much swamped by the "true believers" who spread the BS free.
I know many would take the risk, so I started a poll on another thread and, so far, almost 45% say yes, they would do it.
Yeah! What we're waiting for? Let's send them to die on the moon right away.
I can imagine the headlines the following day: ELECTRONICS FORUM KILLS HALF OF ITS MEMBERS IN SPACE JUST FOR THE HECK OF IT.
I love you, guys. Merry Xmas.