Says a spoiled dishonest brat who immediately jumped at the chance to have the gravy train continue. Can I be paid to work on radar systems if I lie about NASA? Sure, I'll do that. Didn't you say that was your job? So your job requires you to sit all day, and watch readings, then you go home and shill for NASA because they paid you six figures to basically do nothing.
Some people farm for a living, whacking the ground all day to clear and stack soil, whacking it again with a garden rake to make furrows, going up and down to plant seeds. Then going up and down to water them every day. Then milking cows. And getting paid next to nothing for the products they sell that keep the nation fed. And those make the food that you can stuff your face with.
Some people mine for coal, breaking heavy rocks to find bits of softer flammable lignite or anthracite, then pushing those carts to market. And those give the energy for your radar to even run.
Some people clear logs and the like, and smash gravel and mix it to build roads. And you use those roads without a second thought to drive to your job where you mostly sit. A metallurgist makes your antennas, not you. The repair guy sets it up, not you. You get to sit, right?
You get paid a ton to be a shill. You are a spoiled dishonest brat.
Faraday cages do not bounce EM radiation. They absorb them. Pretty significant difference.
Absorption and interference is the same difference. Energy bounces off or gets voided out, it still doesn't go outside the field.
I suppose that depends on how you define "space". The exosphere can reach out to around 6,200 miles where it merges with the solar wind. Then again, we've been trying to tell you that space isn't a perfect vacuum for years. This is why LEO satellites occasionally fall out of orbit and burn up in the denser layers of the atmosphere.
You've also been telling me for years that the (relative) vacuum of space can magically somehow void all friction and if a car were somehow launched into space by super-catapult blaster thingy, rather than falling back to Earth, it could just drive ahead without using a drop of fuel because it's in orbit. Even though this idea fails in vacuum tests.
Perhaps you don't understand that different wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation are affected differently by different solids, liquids and gasses. There is also the fact that ionosphere radio bounce is more of a refractive event than a true bounce.
It's interference with plasma. Radio waves going through a field that knocks it back is akin to this.
Could some signal get through? Maybe? But most of the signal, by your own theory's logic, gets knocked back.