How do you get fluid from high pressure to low pressure?
Using a simple analogy explain this in your own words, let's see if you can do it without searching out something to copy and paste.
It is like having a punch of little sponges or springs, in 2 compartments separated by a wall which can slide along.
The ones in the high pressure region are compressed a lot and wanting to push outwards in all directions.
The ones in the low pressure region aren't as compressed.
This means the ones in the high pressure region can expand, pushing onto the wall that divides them which in turn pushes on the ones in the low pressure region.
This causes the ones in the low pressure region to shrink, while the ones in the high pressure region expand, and the wall moves over.
Without external influence, this will continue until the pressure equalises, with the 2 regions being the same pressure and the sponges all compressed the same.
To keep this working a pump is used to take sponges from the low pressure region and force them into the high pressure region. This keeps there being room in the low pressure region and keeps the ones in the high pressure region compressed.
No video shows any object being pulled by gravity and you know this.
You not liking reality does not change it.
You are also entirely ignoring the key point.
The point from this video is that it is NOT the air. A wake is left behind the ball due to something other than the air moving it down. Whatever is moving it down is called gravity.
And also, as I said, vacuums do not exist.
And as I said, you are lying. Stop pretending to use English when you aren't going to the actual definition of words.
Make up your own word to describe it.
Perfect vacuums don't exist.
That doesn't mean vacuums don't.
Atmospheric pressure is never negligible.
Which means a feather should always fall slowly, and you have no reason at all to claim rockets wont work in space.
Gravity only works if you ignore reality.
If you don't ignore reality, you need something like gravity.
You are yet to present a single time where gravity doesn't work.
Meanwhile, there are plenty of cases where gravity (or some force proportional to mass) is needed to explain reality, where your delusional nonsense doesn't work at all.
Is "reality" another word you ignore the meaning of?
Does it actually mean this real world we live in? Or to you, does "reality" mean your delusional fantasyland where everything just magically works due to air, so far removed from reality it isn't funny?
Then how come carbon monoxide can be made?
Because the bonds (the attractive forces holing the different atoms together) can be broken.
But normally CO is made from incomplete combustion and will react with O2 to produce CO2.
Pressures. Heat. Put your mind to work and understand the sieve.
I have, and clearly explained why your fantasy doesn't work.
In reality, where molecules have a ~fixed size, some molecules will be small enough to go through the pores, and some will not.
So the molecules of gas, flying around and bumping into each other in otherwise free space will sometimes hit the pore and go in, and travel through the pore, but if they are small enough. Larger molecules would hit the pore and bounce off, because they don't fit.
As a simple analogy, get a wall with holes of equal size in it.
Then get a bunch of rigid balls. Some balls are small and fit through the hole. Others are larger, and don't fit.
Now through the balls at the wall.
Some of the small balls will hit a portion of the wall without a hole, and bounce off. Others instead go through the hole.
But for the larger balls, they all bounce off. The best you get is it going to the hole, hitting the rim and bouncing back.
Now lets try it with your nonsense, using sponge balls.
We get the sponge ball, regardless of how large it is, and force it through the hole, and it goes through.
By allowing the "molecules" to expand and contract, we can force them through the hole.
And if you think seawater has negligible changes at depth then I can't help you.
The pressure changes, but the amount there does not.
Just like if you take a block of steel, and put it in a hydraulic press, until it reaches its yield point, it doesn't change much.