No. I asked for proof, and what was presented was crude images.
Actually, you didn't. You just asked to see the photos. Crudity is not, of itself, a disproof of content.
" ... the article you cited says the iss is moving at 17,000 mph. So assuming that is true, and you did somehow see it through a telescope, it would be moving so fast it would be out of view almost instantly. Which means you would have to keep moving your telescope."
Astrophotographers have telescopes which can be moved. I fail to see the insurmountable problem here, given that I've seen the ISS cross my sky twice in one evening, and it takes around 5 - 7 minutes to completely pass over me. Hardly a challenge.
And while we are at it, boffins keep saying we have about 100,000 pieces of space junk in orbit. So if the iss is travelling at 17,000 mph, how in the hell has it not so much as clipped one of these things?
The ISS orbital height remains constant, essentially, so it is never anywhere near anything which occupies a constant higher or lower orbit. For instance, let's say a piece of debris is in orbit at 300 miles up. The ISS is at 254 miles. So there will always be 46 miles or more separating them, assuming each maintains a spherical orbit.
As for anything else in non-regular orbits; space is aptly named. There's a lot of room between orbital objects. Calculate the volume available to all the satellites and junk, and calculate average space available to each. It's huge.