For the curious.
The boots have two layers. This boot is the inner layer.
This is how conspiracy theories ought to work. Perfectly fine to raise a question, and dismissed when you get the answer. Absent is the rampant speculation and unfounded claims.
Itβs because they find evidence to support their truth, instead of formulating a theory based in the evidence. Iβve heard it described with the circle analogy.
Imagine the absolute truth is a circle, but we donβt know what the shape is. By doing research, we find out certain facts as points on that circle. We can then draw straight lines between those points, and draw a shape thatβs as close to the absolute truth as we can get, with the data we have. Further research and discoveries place more dots, sometimes falling outside of the lines weβve drawn. So we redraw the shape more and more, always increasing towards that circle. Thatβs how science works.
Conspiracy theorist do the opposite. They draw a random shape (thatβs nowhere near a circle, like a star), and then go out to find proof that fits on that shape. Some proof is correct - it just happens to fall on the same lines as the circle. Others are completely out there, aligning with their shape, but not with the circle (because itβs not relevant to the truth). And if they do find proof that fits on the circle, but not on their star, itβs ignored.
I like debates but most conspiracy debates are absolutely insufferable because of this. No matter how many points get completely debunked, they move on to the next one, and even worse, continue spreading the debunked points afterwards. They donβt give a shit about science or the truth.
Itβs a ~$700,000 space suit custom tailored for a single astronaut on a single mission. Why wouldnβt it have the astronautβs name stitched into it?
Also, have you never seen a NASA/Air Force/Military uniform in general? They all wear their names somewhere.
Also, so you can quickly put on the correct suit, quickly, in pretty disorienting conditions.
Itβs a 700k suit to make in todayβs money.
That doesnβt include R&D, and very notably doesnβt include things the life support backpack or helmet either. If you add those, you come to something like nearly 2 million in 1967 money, or nearly 19 million in modern money.
Custom tailored suits that have to fit you perfectly so you donβt die. And might have to put them on very fast in an emergency, in low or zero g, with potential limited light. Big, high contrast, labels are probably helpful.
Also, these things were tested and iterated on repeatedly. If something is on that suit, itβs often because itβs solving a problem that was identified in a past test.