No the thrust from the balance point is not being applied uniformly across the balanced object. This uneven thrust is what would cause the tipping to occur under UA.
I thought that would be the answer, but no. There is no downward force and all objects move up. Only a free object will move down, because we move up. As long as an object is connected to another, it will move upwards with it. Laws of Newton.
There are no sideway forces, right? So a brick wall will stay stationary if you put it on the road.
Let's pretend this line is the wall |
There is a car traveling in one direction, towards the wall <--.
The car hits the wall | <--- Do the bricks go in the opposite direction -->? Because the car pivots it? No. Why? Because there are no forces acting upon it in the other direction. Same happens if you have an upward movement ^ and no downward movement. You could move an object so it is completely off balance, as long as it is connected to the rest of the world it will move upwards. Once you push the object away, so it floats free in the air, it can move downwards, because the earth is moving upwards.
This does not make sense and you cannot image a wooden board for example to be all the way out, with only a small part connected to another object.
____ (wooden board)
| (object attached to the world)
---------------------- (earth, constantly moving upwards)
It will fall down, and the falling down cannot occur if there is no downward force. Just like the bricks from the wall will not start flying in the opposite direction if a car hits it. The downward force we witness is gravity and not an upward motion from earth.