That's not even a rational statement IMO. Nature has very specific ways of manifesting it's forces in atmospheres. Electrical discharges occur "naturally" in every atmosphere in this solar system with a magnetic field and an atmosphere and the sun has the MOST of each! Nature favors "electrical discharges" in the atmospheres of physical bodies with magnetic fields and atmospheres. They occur in MANY atmosphere of MANY other bodies in this system.
And we've been over this before. Lightning is observed in non-conductive atmospheres. Even you have to admit that the conductivity of an atmosphere should have a dramatic impact on any electrical discharges in that atmosphere (do you really think that terrestrial lightning would look the same if our atmosphere was conductive? If so, then why don't we see underwater lightning?), and therefore one cannot readily extrapolate from terrestrial lightning observations to solar observations.
And, of course, your whole paragraph does not address my original point that your 7 things are all associated with very high temperatures, regardless of the heating mechanism.
But I consider the whole 7-points thing to be another red herring.
ONE paper couldn't support one aspect of my ideas?
Actually, those were quotes from two papers. And it wasn't that they simply "couldn't support one aspect;" they strongly contradicted your central premise.
How about the rest of them Das?
I've covered that, too. I've read a number of the papers that you asked us to read, and almost invariably I've found that they either weren't relevant or directly contradicted you. You've exhausted the amount of time I was willing to spend reading papers for you.
I'm willing to take the good with the bad. Not every paper can support every idea I've put forth. Some do, some don't. So what?
Okay, let me see if I understand you. You claim that everyone else is ignoring or handwaving any data that contradicts the conventional model. Yet when confronted with data that contradicts your model,
from sources you provided, your response is "Some do, some don't. So what?"
<sigh>
Can you see why that sort of statement implies that you'll believe in ES regardless of any actual facts or data? And why it seems absolutely futile to continue this discussion?