Like I said, even if it were as bad as you say, you're still wrong even if BBT is also wrong. Your model is falsified by such observations as aberration,
Assuming that Snell's law still works for a photon in a vacuum. I can conceptually understand how I would add Snell's law to the model, by adding atoms for the photon to interact with. But that doesn't test the hypothesis of speed of light in a vacuum.
I think that's a good test, and I'll need to find Hubble data on high z galaxies on the horizon at opposite sides of the sun to confirm the hypothesis is falsified.
the asteroid occultation study Myriad linked earlier.
Yeah, I think that's a good. It'd be good to compare the results they got with a low z galaxy to a high z galaxy.
Also, as Ziggurat has pointed out, your model doesn't even get right the one thing it aspires to: the red-shift distance relationship.
Well, if that's the case, let's get down to brass tacks.
In which message was that said? Did I miss it?
The redshift-distance relationship is equal to the standard model for the near universe, and lower than the standard model for the far universe, which agrees with the latest measurements. Here's H74, green=hypothesis, white=standard model.
Your model would give different answers for different observers.
Only in a Newtonian context. In relativity, it's still all the same.
Relativity already sort of takes care of this, when the light cone is depicted like this:
In relativity, you start with a light cone (v_light = c) and you add the expansion of space (v_galaxy = H * D) and that closes the cone.
My suggestion does the same thing in one step (v_light = c - H * D).
In my hypothesis, special relativity produces the red-shift, by upgrading the 2nd postulate to be the speed of light is c - H * D.
Or, you could do it the standard way, where H * D comes in due to the expansion of space.
In either case the light cone looks the same.
Nor does it offer an explanation for that thing. "Photons just do that, I guess" is not an explanation. It is a posit with no rationale.
We observe redshifts.
The suggestion is that they are how nature works.
If they aren't how nature works, the universe inflated in a nano second 14 billion years ago.
Dark energy does sound cooler.