The example you are trying to make is silly because the time dilation effect is seen between two entities Relative to each other, it doesn't work to try to speed up the rate of expansion which Einstein's theory fixed at c
More to the point, this is just too tedious to deal with. I no longer have the energy to deal with what is, at best, your volitional ignorance
==The example you are trying to make is silly because the time dilation effect is seen between two entities Relative to each other
Ok, I’ll cut right to the chase. You are assuming the universe has no center. However, if the universe is bounded there is a net gravitational force towards the center. Moreover, observations of the universe tell us it is expanding away from our solar system, which suggests we are at or near the center of the universe. And since the universe is expanding that indicates that it is not in a black hole, for if it was the universe would be infilling, which, as mentioned above, is not indicated by the evidence. That means, according to Einstein’s theory of Gen. Rel., the universe must have expanded out of a white hole. According to Gen. Rel., time virtually stands still at the event horizon of the same, whereas distant objects in the universe could age billions of years. Thus, it is easily possible for the earth to be thousands of years old and distant objects of the observable universe to be billions of years old (relatively speaking), and yet both be the product of the same Big Bang event. Hence, it is theoretically possible for light from stars billions of lightyears away to reach the earth.