When you see time as a physical force you start to realise that special relativity is actually natural as well. Effectively every atom that makes you "you" was something else and existed as something else before you. Thus it must have covered distance with speeds we cannot comprehend and because it is simply exist in time and space and move about time in space it is possible to conclude that our past and our future co-exist with the now.
Your conclusion does not necessarily follow from your premise. That would be like saying "All elephants are grey, this teapot is grey, therefore this teapot must be an elephant". Your argument is logically flawed.
Example you take a diamond shoot it into space and in space it gets burned to a crisp and when you find it again it is just powder but the powder was the diamond and the atoms in the powder at one stage got replaced by other atoms doing the exact same thing thus the powder remains powder but the atoms that was in the powder might be in you when you shot the diamond to space or when you discovered it as powder
Again, your argument is logicaly flawed. If the atoms were in the diamond when you launched it, they cannot have been in you. (Unless you're positing that the diamond somehow spontaenously time traveled, in which case you would never have found it again in the first place because it would have time traveled back to where it could form you, and thus not be present in the...present, floating around)
Surly we must then accept that yes it was a diamond it is powder but the atoms between the "was" and the "is" may not be the same and yet the material in your hand exist in yesterday and will exist in the tomorrow. the mechanics behind it suggest a shortcut and that shortcut must be real otherwise the atoms will not move as science have showed they do.
Again, your conclusion does not follow from your premise. Atoms are exchanged in and out of materials all the time. Electrolysis, oxidation, etc. That doesn't mean the objects themselves are somehow significant. They're just temporary collections of atoms, in much the same way you or I are.
I will be doing an experiment "very soon" that will create a massive magnetic force and I will be looking for artificial phenomena and if I can find it then things start to get interesting.
It is true I may find nothing but I am testing my ideology because I am willing to be wrong but I am not willing to simply accept that something is impossible because I don't believe anything is impossible.
Let us know how that goes, I would be very interested in hearing the results. And don't forget to record the experiment with as many instruments as possible.