Totallackey and Tom you still have not answered the question posed by the OP.
Hard to answer a question based on supposition.
Anyone with a decent telescope costing a hundred dollars or more can see Jupiter’s red spot moving to the edge then it disappears for four hours and some minutes and appears again on the other side of it. The amount of time it is visible being near equal to the time it disappeared.
As demonstrated earlier this is evidence a spot appears and disappears and not evidence of rotation.
It has objects orbiting it (four big ones easily seen from Earth), we call them moons, you call them whatever you want. We also regularly see those objects cast shadows upon Jupiter. We can also watch those moons orbit with a time frame, even disappearing behind Jupiter to come out the other side. You both fail to address this as well.
So, something disappears to where?
How do you know where they disappear to if you can no longer observe them?
There are millions of people with telescopes. It is a guarantee that all of them look at Jupiter and its four easily viewable moons.
Citation please.
://www.cloudynights.com/index Is one of many discussion forums about astrophotography with 800,000 plus member accounts. I think it is safe to say that millions of people have seen it rotating and taken millions of photos of it. Are you really telling us that images of Jupiter are questionable? Is https://www.cloudynights.com/index and its 800,000 members all government shills posting fake pictures of the cosmos?
Oh, so only 800 thousand accounts = millions...
Who said anything about fake pictures or shills?
So, basically, you have nothing as usual to add. You are seriously questioning if millions have looked through a telescope?
If you look at just cheap telescopes, Walmart alone sells well over 100,000 scopes a year. (4200 Walmart stores, you do the math) Meade sells 12 million dollars a year worth of entry level beginner telescopes and they are a distant number 3 telescope producer in the U.S. alone... Average price of a Meade beginner scope of $100 puts them at over 100,000 scopes a year.
A little math (common sense) shows millions of people have telescopes. Meade, Celestron, Orion sell around 10,000 serious telescopes a year capable of resolving nebulae, wide angle views of planets, etc. Those people have families, classrooms, etc who they share their serious hobby with I have no doubt. Yes, millions of people have easily looked through a scope and personally seen Jupiter.