"There would be no snatch effect on your side as
your side is the forward force and energy,
I would be the reaction force and energy in snatching your force and energy away from you, which totally cancels that force out."
That is the problem, when you push something, the same strength you apply to that something is applied back to you, if you punch a wall, you will feel the punch, if you try to push a wall, you will feel the push, you will feel the same force you are applying, if you kick a ball really slow (low force) you will barely feel anything in your foot (also because of the shoe) but the ball will move because of its smaller mass, if you kick it really fast (stronger) you will feel more the balls resistance.
But from a physic point of view,
which is the action and which is the reaction is irrelevant, as both happen at the exact same time, not any second, millisecond or nanosecond after the first.
It happens at the exact time both object touch each other, both feel the exact same force being applied to them, but in opposite directions. Which one will move more or less depends on the mass.
Besides my previous post, there are some things you are not saying right.
"I snatch that cannonball milliseconds (for instance) before you release it, meaning ...I, have took away
the force that you were going to apply to the cannon ball."
I was already applying force the moment I started pushing, not the moment i released it. The movement: of me and the ball, also starts the moment I start pushing, not after the ball stops touching my hands (because i could just push the ball, while not grabbing it, so there is no "release").
And assuming this happens, it would be like thinking vacuum, which is literally nothing, constantly creates enough force to nullify any force applied on it. A pull, just as a push, requires force. It is also counter intuitive representing void with a person (you) making a pull at some precise moment. Because void is not something, its the lack of anything.
The air forces itself into vacuum here on earth because of the air pressure, not because of vacuum force
It's fine saying the rocket works against itself and I can see how people can subscribe to it.
The fuel in the rocket works against the rocket, so in effect, no matter how it's dressed up...the theory is that the rocket is pushing against itself.
No, because mass is actually leaving the rocket, the mass that leaves the rocket is the one pushing it, not the one still inside. I will say it again: Iit would be like you getting out of your car and pushing it once. End of the story, you don't get back in, you don't push it again, you just push it and say outside as your car moves away.