You still dance around the question and refuse to answer. What is the single best defining factor that proves the hoax? "The video" does not cut it.
I did watch one of those links you posted, if you remember, and then found a heap of evidence that it was just smoke in the wind.
If you are unwilling to pick out your defining feature of the video, then pick a random one and say it straight out in plain text without saying "The proof is in the video." You are afraid to do so because if a single one of the 'proofs' on the video can be proven false, then the entire thing is subject to doubt.
If this is about the photos taken on the moon, then yes, they have been editted. But only in the same way your family photo has been cropped, color corrected, and centered to show the best parts.
As to losing an arguement, repeating the same vague thing over and over again when someone asks you for something specific is most likely puts you on the losing side.
"Why are you right?"
"Because the video says so."
"What part specifically makes you the most right?"
"The video."
"Why should we spend four hours watching a video when there is a greater amount of info contained in shorter texts?"
"Because the videos are all I have."
You really should have more than one source."
"Just watch the video."
"You mean the one featuring David Groves?"
"Yes"
"Why should we trust what David Groves, PhD, says?"
"Because he has a PhD, and that means he -knows- things."
"What about all the other people with PhDs who say he is wrong?"
"They must not know the same things he does, and be wrong."
"But they are PhDs, so they must -know- things."
"He did experiments they did not."
"You mean these experiments?
http://www.clavius.org/envradfilm.html"
"I don't know. Was it in the video?"
"I don't know, I did not watch the video."
"You should, as is has all this unrefutable proof."
"Unrefutable by any of this?
http://www.clavius.org/index.html"
"Well, I would rather not say."
"Why?"
"I don't like being wrong."
*bows out*