First, 'known forces of nature' are so known via equations and numbers only; if you work at the 'qualitative' level, you cannot have 'known forces of nature'.
Second, a century (or more) may well pass between the first publication of the equations and numbers describing a 'known force of nature' and its testing in the lab.
Third, the application of math to points on the sky can lead to acceptance of a new 'force of nature'.
And so on.
Now we know, from a great many of MM's posts, that he rejects all three of the above points, especially the third one. This alone makes his approach to science very different than that of scientists - or at least physicists - over the past four+ centuries ... and it means that the discussion we should be having is not about Birkeland, the solar wind, inflation, Einstein's EFE, negative pressure, etc; rather it should be about what constitutes science (or at least physics).
If we were to have such a discussion, I think we'd find that a key aspect of MM's approach is an unstated, and possibly unrecognised, misunderstanding of equations and numbers; in short, a world where the quantitative revolution didn't happen.