As I noted, that cosmology statemernt is signed by some of the people who run Las Alamos. I’ll tell you something else here: history of science books are not going to be terribly kind to Albert Einstein. Aside from Dayton Miller and the fact that the basic Michelson/Morley experiment appears not to fail when conducted with better equipment and at higher altitudes, there are at least two elephant in livingroom kinds of problems with what Einstein had to say about gravity, one being that gravity propagates instantaneously to within our ability to measure it.
I’m guessing that in 100 years he’ll be a footnote in history books, while the real scientists will have come to terms with the electrical nature of the universe. Some interesting things at this website:
We're coming upon about 90 years his theory of General Relativity has held up. But if you dismiss him....O.K. Your support for the Las Alamos theories are noted.