There's a reason we have the phrase "it's not rocket science". It is extremely complex. As JayUtah has told you, neither of those answers are correct. But your extremely bad analogous comparison needs quantifying. On the one hand I asked AI to help you to understand your appalling physics failures, where you reconciled soil rising with a jumper to some suction-cup/vacuum explanation and then when realising how dumb that was you moved on to a force that isn't even a propelling one. AI is quite able to gleam how physics works in such simple circumstances - you though, not so much.
Quit behaving like some prima-donna and take your rocket science lessons.
Let's make this clear. Even for what you THINK are simple situations, such as "pushing a cart", there is a MUCH MORE COMPLEX MOLECULAR SCIENCE beneath it all. We are Trillions of wonderful atom and molecules. When you THINK you are simply touching the cart - it's truly a VERY COMPLEX reaction between the molecules/atoms in your hand, and those of the cart. Trillions of interactions are happening with this simple push.
And just as "molecular science" truly explains HOW the force was generated, you simply do NOT need to know this. It drops out. The "HOW" makes no difference to the Newtonian Physics. All we need to figure here is "NET FORCE" (the result of all of those Trillions of interactions).
BUT - you don't have to drop into the "molecular science" in order to be able to calculate the Force you applied, simply by observing the acceleration curve of the cart. That's the beauty of this physics -- it CANNOT BE BROKEN (not in this close-system context), no matter how complex are the "causes of acceleration". All we're measuring is NET acceleration - which can then accurately derive NET force.
No amount of "complexity underneath" can justify the "creation of new energy".... at least not in this isolated rigid-body simple setup.
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In my world, Jay appears to be what we call a "poser" - someone who pretends to know more than what they really know, and so hang out in groups where they simply cannot tell the difference. His biggest strength appears to be his way-with-words, which enables him to fool those who cannot tell the difference between a good rocket scientist, and a not-good one.
Even the mighty Jay cannot teach someone how to Create New Energy.