Ugh. You're regressing. We've already covered this, and you've agreed to it in the past.
Einstein's original theory predicted spatial expansion or contraction.
Einstein added the blunder to stop space from expanding or contracting.
The non-blunder theory that you allegedly accept requires expansion or contraction of space.
You and I have a fundamental disagreement about the concept of what GR actually "predicts" in terms of 'expansion". I'll grant you that *objects can move*. Objects in spacetime will not tend to stay in motion forever and ever all by themselves however. They will eventually tend to 'contract', to pull together based on the curvature of spacetime.
*If* we had enough of a release of energy from a single point, that mass/energy might leave from that location with such energy that it will never again all collect back to a single point (thermonuclear explosion in a 'one bomb' "spacetime).
What I will *not* agree with is your claim that GR theory *necessarily* insists that the metric itself *must* (the word must is important) expand. You and I seem to be in complete disagreement on that point.
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0601171
So no, we do not have to build a blunder theory. Al's original theory yielded metric expansion of space.
How? By adding a non zero cosmological constant when a zero would have been fine in terms of the formulas themselves?
We've gone over this before, too. But alas your denialism prevents you from accepting the obvious fact that what the Einstein tensor is, is a combination of derivatives of the metric. If the metric has nonzero derivatives,
I think the operative word here is *if*, much like the term 'must' in my previous sentence. Why would the metric have a nonzero derivative (in terms of pure empirical physics)? Can it *never* have a zero derivative?
then space is expanding or contracting.
You haven't physically defined "space", nor have you physically explained why the metric *must* have a nonzero derivative.
GR is about how the metric changes. GR is a theory of how rulers and clocks wiggle and wobble.
Nope. You can demonstrate that time wiggles. You cannot demonstrate that rulers change or the metric does expansion that is somehow separate from the movement of objects.
As best as I can tell you've put a math formula on a theological pedestal, and you haven't demonstrated a metric expansion of space in controlled experimentation, nor could you ever hope to do so. What you've done is elevated a math formula to the 'supernatural god' realm, one that relates *only* to things that exist *away from* the Earth, in some mythical empty region of spacetime.
Face it. You left out all the plasma and EM fields that hold the whole universe together. You left out the scattering and signal broadening effects of light traveling through a plasma medium. You've left out the EM factors that *must* be accounted for in a mostly plasma universe.
That's exactly why you need all the various supernatural constructs and claims to fill in the gaps.
To your credit however, I'll grant you that the EU/PC crowd has done an equally bad job of incorporating GR theory into it's mathematical presentation. From my vantage point it's a bit like sitting the middle, watching two folks take two extreme positions rather than looking for a rational middle ground.
