WTF??

How does shattering an object -
any object -change the collective mass of the remaining fragments? Mass is not lost merely because an object is broken up into pieces; it merely means you have a collective group that adds up to the same mass the singular object previously had.
It's as if truthers don't understand shotguns. For the love of God, the fragmentation of an object has no effect on it's mass. When 1 kg of something hits a surface, it's 1kg impacting it whether that 1kg is a single monolithic object or a collection of masses that add up to a kilogram. The f=ma equation does not change. The only difference is impulse, and
X already covered that in his earlier post. I only took one year of high school AP physics, as well as the minimum required basic physics in college, and I
still understand this. How in God's name can anyone else not?
It's not that hard to understand!