Don't misquote me, please.
I always provide a link when I quote somebody, so interested parties can see the entire context.
You failed to understand the point. Both gravity and plasma can in principle be "scaled". That is, we know what the laws of physics are and so we can deduce what the situation will be when we scale everything up in size. One of the immediate and obvious consequences is that gravity is much stronger than electromagnetism (for large objects which are uncharged on average).
I hope we all agree that "stronger" is relative, as my example should make clear. If everything was a solid neutral body, then gravity would be all there is. Obviously most of the Universe is plasma, which may be "neutral" from the point of view, that if we add the charges up we get a balanced or neutral charge. But in reality, plasmas carry magnetic fields with them, and they move, so they are not neutral in regards to what happens. Like the earth is not neutral in regards to what happens when massive amounts of MASS slams into it. Because the Mass isn't really neutral. Moving ionized particles create, well, you know. If they slam into each other, they also create all kinds of EM radiation as well.
The earth IS almost neutral - how many times do you have to be told that? That doesn't prevent it from having a magnetic field. Did you think refrigerator magnets, or electromagnets for that matter, have a net charge?.
You keep talking about "net charge". Nobody thinks the earth or moon or sun are attracted to each other because of EM. OK maybe Jerome, but nobody really is saying that, except maybe him. I don't want to even give that idea more than a passing chuckle. Maybe a guffaw.
Of course the earth, as well as most non-plasma matter is neutral. That is how things are. Otherwise there would be electric currents and lightning everywhere, a terrible situation.
So electrodynamics and Maxwell's equations are "dumb"? Words with precise technical meanings are "dumb"? But please, don't let reality or the laws of physics stand in the way of your idiotic and ignorant polemics.
You said that, not me. Yes, precise definitions are used to avoid misunderstanding stuff. Saying something is neutral, in regards to charge, seems to mean something. I'm not sure what you want to get across.
In regards to gravity VS Electromagnetism, (forget about that strong force, it isn't even in the picture), some things, some very large things, are dominated by EM, not gravity.
Like the magnetic field of the sun. And the solar wind, and the galactic wind, and somewhere way out there, I don't think anybody is 100% sure yet, the solar wind (and Magnetic field) meets the Galactic wind (and it's magnetic field), and stuff happens. If gravity has little or no effect on the plasma streaming out of the sun, near the sun, it has almost no effect on it way out there, where mysterious things are happening.
Maybe. Best theories I have read say gravity is not a player there. But the radio energy coming from the heliopause says there is energy being released and transmuted and other interesting stuff. Shock waves, and mingling of magnetic fields and who knows what.
Is the boundary out there, with it's shock waves and radio energies and maybe teardrop shape, is that a large thing? It might extend to our nearest neighbor, we know it is at least halfway there.
That is a big thing. A magnetic plasma "thing" that is so big it is hard to imagine. Is it neutral? No net charge? Possibly so.
So gravity must dominate it's structure. Because according to Sol, big things are neutral, so only gravity matters.
Wait, let me quote you.
"One of the immediate and obvious consequences is that gravity is much stronger than electromagnetism (for large objects which are uncharged on average)."
-Sol