Board Thread:General Discussion/@comment-7333961-20130429160230/@comment-8505655-20130430115324

No, what I mean is that he should be flying backward, because there is no apparent force equalizing the wind he produces. As best we can tell, he just floats there (which is a mystery in itself, come to think of it) and produces sufficiently strong wind as to send his enemies careening through the air. It's like a rocket ging through its blastoff sequence and not going anywhere. I think Newton would have something to say about equal and opposite reactions here.

Long story short: Without a force in the back to mirror the one in the front, Terraspin should not be stationary. So (A) there is one, but we cannot see it, (B) Terraspin can negate certain fundamental laws of the universe (the ramifications of this would be staggering), or (C) he somehow roots himself in place, even with no apparent connection to anything.