One of the strongest habits inside BFUT should never be lost:
Always separate observation from interpretation.
That habit is a superpower.
It protects the theory from overclaiming, and it forces the standard model onto less comfortable ground. Redshift is an observation. Expanding space is an interpretation. The CMB is an observation. Its exclusive origin story is an interpretation. Mature distant galaxies are observations. Their supposed timeline crisis is an interpretation inside a specific framework. Dark sector phenomena are observations. The current inventory story about them is an interpretation.
This distinction matters more than most people realize.
Because mainstream cosmology often benefits from the public forgetting it. Once a certain interpretation has been repeated for decades, people start speaking as though the data themselves say it directly. BFUT’s discipline is to keep saying: no, the data are real, but the story is contestable.
That is how you build a durable alternative.
Not by denying what everyone can see, but by denying that the dominant reading owns what everyone can see.
This is not just rhetoric.
It is methodological maturity.
Any future BFUT article, talk, presentation, or debate becomes stronger when it follows this pattern: state the observation cleanly, state the standard interpretation fairly, isolate the overreach, then present the BFUT alternative. That sequence builds trust and makes dismissal harder.
A theory that remembers this habit can grow without becoming sloppy.
BFUT should guard it fiercely.
Download the research paper: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19149786 (doi.org in Bing) Download the simulation code: https://zenodo.org/records/19124510 Watch the simulation work: https://vijayshankarsharma.com/