air does not exist, i never said gases did not. nitrogen etc do not occur around us, but they do exist. try reading.
When blowing up a balloon, what do you inhale then exhale to inflate the balloon? Force?
Don't tell the terrorists. The could buy an air compressor and just compress pure energy. Imagine what they could do with 200 gallons of pure energy at 150 psi.
The problem I see with it is that since air doesn't exist, the air compressors won't do anything. You need invent a force compressor for this plan to work.
force does account for expanding the balloon. even you have to admit that, with no force it wouldn't expand. the force dissipates if you leave it untied, and is slowly used up regardless even if you do tie off the balloon. this also shows air can't be to blame because air wouldn't be able to escape, while force does indeed dissipate.
Why wouldn't air be able to escape? There is an opening in the balloon. The rubber of the balloon has energy stored in it from being stretched. The rubber then retains its original shape pushing the air out of the balloon.
compressed air can be any things. gases do exist so often they are simply compressed. otherwise they simply hold force, which is later released. that is how compressed air is used, remember?
But if air doesn't exist, how can it be compressed?
air can't escape if you tie off the hole. try reading.
compressed air is the name, it is not an accurate description. the gases that make up air do exist, as i have repeatedly said. they are just clearly not everywhere like air is said to be.
Oh really? They are clearly not everywhere? Then please tell me all the clear evidence they are not everywhere.
literally the first post in this thread. are you at all able to read? we can see molecules aren't everywhere by simple observation. open your eyes. literally. do you feel them being hammered by millions of molecules? imagine how just one grain of sand feels. the amount of molecules hitting you are at least that large all together.
think for yourself.
then we can also see, for example, the fact steam floats when it is h2o, when oxygen alone, even without the two hydrogens, is heavier than nitrogen, the dominant component of air.