Gah! I edited my last post rather than adding a new post. Rats.
Let me explain the relative gravity issue again:
If the universe itself rotates in a universal magnetic field and rotates once every 22 years, this movement would create the condition of producing local grativity conditions that are offset by the centrifical force of the vertical rotation of the universe itself. Within the confines of the local solar system, we we would experience a gravity measurement that is "relative" to the motions involved and yet this vertical movement would have the affect of making the sun "seem" lighter than it actually is when we factor in the rotation in 3D.
As far as the "lensing" issue goes, I still haven't heard a rational reason to believe that a particle with LESS mass will be MORE affected by gravity than one with MORE mass. If I have to come up with rational answers that adhere to the known laws of physics, then you folks must also do the same. Whatever forces "bend" the photon, must also bend the neutrino for the very same reason.
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