If space is not expanding, how can galaxies move faster than light speed?

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There is a question mark based on this question.

If space is not expanding, then the distance between any two points cannot increase the speed of light (or faster). This limit is constrained by Einstein's Theory of Relativity.

But we have evidence that the gap is expanding automatically. Everything is moving away from everything else. You can understand this detail as a flowering balloon.

The question now arises, even if space is expanding, are not any two points moving away from each other at the speed of light, is it a violation of the laws of physics?

The answer is no! Because the theory of relativity forces the range of motion, not the expansion. And here both the points are not moving away from each other in their normal sense but as a result of the expansion of the universe.

I would also like to say that man's understanding of physics is said to believe in the context of this subject.

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