The computers are a bad excuse. Garbage in a computer remains garbage out. Perhaps you believe that a computer can replace the human intelligence. In fact it is the problem of the QCD which is missing the target and therefore will never be able to calculate the binding energy of a single nucleus because it is high fantasy.
In 1990, you would have said the same thing about mesons. "QCD is missing the target and will never be able to calculate the mass of a single pion", you would have said, using
the same logic (or non-logic) you have now. Unfortunately, as computing power (and QCD algorithms) improved, we brute-forced our way through and solved that problem---lattice QCD has finally succeeded in predicting light meson masses.
Why, exactly, do you think "some things are too hard to calculate" means "the theory is garbage"? You have not even tried to explain this, you just state it as though it was a fact.
The nuclear interaction is electric and not a mysterious "strong" force accompanied with an equally imaginary "weak" force.
If QCD is so "fantastical", why does it work so well at high energies? I would welcome from you a list of experiments that disagree with QCD's many predictions. That's basically a rhetorical question: I know you will not provide such a list, because there isn't one, which I know because I've been studying this stuff for 15+ years.
If the weak force is so fantastical, why does it work so well
everywhere? I would welcome from you a list of experiments that disagree with electroweak theory. I know you will not provide such a list, because there isn't one, which I know because I've been studying this stuff for 15+ years. If you had a
serious complaint about the weak interaction, you'd be pointing to the NOMAD Weinberg angle anomaly, or the MiniBOONE low-energy neutrino data, or the muon g-2 anomaly, or one of the things that
serious weak-interaction physicists---who, in general, would be thrilled to find an experimental deviation from the Standard Model weak interaction---use to motivate the hope for such deviations.
ETA: NOMAD, MiniBOONE, and muon g-2 disagree with the best available Standard Model calculations by 2.5--3.5 sigma. My view of these, which is not atypical, is: NOMAD's deviation is consistent with an ordinary statistical fluctuation; MiniBOONE's disagreement is dominated by a difficult-to-calculate background which they may have simply gotten wrong; g-2's "theory" is a very difficult calculation, incorporating 8-loop QED, 2-loop weak interactions, and QCD, with an unfortunate history of negative-sign errors. Of the three, in my opinion g-2 seems the most likely to be a real effect with hints of non-Standard-Model physics, followed by MiniBOONE (which, if it's a real effect, has candidate explanations in sterile neutrinos), followed by NOMAD (haven't seen an idea I like).