I'm not the one who keeps changing the target.
Ok lets just repost all the same information, again.
Not if you make it hot or cold enough.
Stay with me, this is you responding to:
HEY SIX!!!
Water, is wet.
Now, your stance up to this point is, water IS NOT WET (stay with me here, I know it's hard)
Not if you make it hot or cold enough.
So, you claim WATER isn't wet if you make it hot or cold enough.
Then you respond with
Correct, you didn't SAY ONLY, you just said water isn't wet. Then posted a link about dry water, which, by definition ISN'T WATER IF YOU ACTUALLY READ THE ARTICLE YOU LINKED. Regardless, that has literally NOTHING to do with adding heat or removing it. (Not couting the tiny, tiny amount of heat added due to spinning the water with siclia as pointed out in the article).
Up next this gem:
It's commonly called "dry steam". You could google it, if you've never heard of it before.
Here you completely change the topic at hand. Dry steam is not dry water. Water isn't steam and steam isn't water.
Almost at the end, stay with me.
When I provided a link to dry water, you weren't happy. Now you want to go back to discussing dry water?
Ah, here you even state you provided a link to dry water but want to go back to discussing... dry water..? I'm not even sure what you are trying to do here logically. But illogically you are just circumventing the question at hand.
I'm not the one who keeps changing the target.
Oh but you are, as it has been clearly shown above.
So I'll ask a third time.
So please logically explain how that process above adds or removes heat as it pretains to your "Not if you make it hot or cold enough" statement.
I can't wait for you to 1) completely ignore all these facts, or to somehow spin it around that you didn't make these claims in the hopes that I won't just re-quote everything you've already cleared stated, and thus dug the hole so deeply for yourself.