Yes, but I was looking for a number. I agree, it's a very shaky plot, that only has two points of data.
However, one needs to consider the chain of discovery here.
1) The Cannae group "discovers" anomalous thrust on one of their test articles. They ask reputable scientists to test it. Fearing "cold fusion" backlash from such research, said reputable scientists dont want to touch it. They asks China.
2) China tests it, and likes the results enough to build a freaking HUGE test article; they report absurd amounts of thrust, given the energy input. (enough to exceed the thrust that would be expected through thermal excitation alone, given the energy delivered to the test article.)
3) In the US, Nasa-Eagleworks decides to test it further. They develop the Q-Thruster modelling framework hypothesis for the device, and begin more detailed testing. Their results with a number of different instruments show a clear alteration of photon paths in vacuum when test articles are active, which is how they derived their Q-thruster model parameters.
At this point in the game, we need experimental refutation of the Q-thruster modelling framework postulated by the Eagleworks team. Not rhetorical grandstanding arguments.