But not because gravity acts on things differently on earth than it does on the moon or a vacuum.
Of course not. I don't think that I implied that. (However, if you want to get picky in terms on non-Newtonian physics, there is some uncertainty about 90% or more of the mass-energy in the universe, the possibility that the cosmological constant is more than just a fudge factor, and so forth, and how some fundamental things, which we previously thought were constants, might vary in space or time or both. But that, too, was not part of or implied in my discussion.

)