In time. Although most of what I've seen so far is drivel.
Much of the evidence is far beyond your ability to contradict. I understand. In a whirlwind of NASA's inconsistency and delusion, it's virtually impossible to stand up for them.
So what, hypothetically, is needed to allow us to examine the stars with the scientific method, from your point of view? What's the difference between performing spectrometry on a sample inches away from you in a lab and a sample hundreds of light years away? Is there a certain distance when it stops being scientific?
Stars are not lab experiments. When you play with elements in the lab you are not playing with the stars. You may come to the hypothesis that because helium has a red spectrometry, that the red spectrometry of the stars may also be indicative of helium. But that it a
hypothesis. There is no test to come to the truth of the matter. You have observed the stars and nothing more, coming to a "conclusion" with no test to back it up. There are may other things which have a similar color in their spectrometry, but helium is a "best guess" because current Nuclear Fusion theories invoke helium.
Real scientists do not hypothesize and conclude. Real scientists hypothesize, test, and then conclude. If there is no test, a conclusion cannot be reached. Astronomers must understand this, and hold it dear to the fundamental tenets of their ideas. They must realize that they are not scientists and that they do not conduct science. They conduct hypothesis and no more.
Again, huge videos, all I've seen so far is nonsense.
The length of the video is immaterial to the debate. If you cannot come up with an argument for "why" the wealth of evidence presented is "nonsense," or why the evidence is wrong, your argument has no merit. I've been encouraging REers to "demonstrate" opinions, and yet it seems to be an impossible task.
If you cannot demonstrate an idea, then it is just an idea. This is an important point to not only the subject matter of the video, but to astronomy as well.