Not quite. I'm saying a neutrino is like a photon, not an electron.
It is like a photon in that it carries no electric charge. It is like an electron in that it participates in weak interactions, has mass (for at least two of the varieties), and is a fermion. It is clearly more similar to an electron than a photon, all things considered.
The speed is indistinguishable from c.
Though it has been indistinguishable from c in some measurements to date, that does not mean that the speed
is c. If a neutrino has mass (i.e. "rest" mass) and SR is right, its speed must always be
less than c. Do you think neutrinos are massless? Do you think SR is wrong?
The mass is only there when the speed is less than c, and it varies because the speed varies, because it's some kind of breather.
That is speculative and unsupported by evidence. In addition, if you're saying it sometimes travels at c and sometimes does not, you contradict SR. If a neutrino has mass (and again I'm talking about "rest" mass here, which does not vary), the speed is always less than c. If it is massless, the speed is always equal to c.
But regardless of any oscillation, it doesn't stop.
If and only if you believe there is no inertial frame in which the neutrino is at rest. In other words, if and only if you believe the neutrino is massless.
I'm also saying a neutrino isn't like an electron. We can use a photon to make an electron via pair production.
Not on its own you can't (it would violate momentum conservation). However, in the presence of a suitable e/m field (e.g. that of an atomic nucleus) you can sometimes get a photon to produce an electron/positron pair; there are also other possibilities.
Anyway, so what? That is of precisely zero relevance to the vague claim that a neutrino is in some unspecified sense more similar to a photon than an electron.
The electron is like
a photon in a box, minus the box. So's the positron. The neutrino isn't.
None of them are. This is all unsupported by evidence. Also, it is in direct contradiction to what is known about fundamental particles. Photons are neutral; putting one in a "box" does not magically generate a net charge. Photons obey Bose-Einstein statistics; putting one in a "box" does not magically make it obey Fermi-Dirac statistics as electrons do. Photons do not interact with Z
0 bosons; you get the picture.
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ETA: I'm not going to contribute further to the derail of this thread. I'd be happy to continue the discussion in a more appropriate thread, though.