Yeah, yeah... Blah, blah.
Every time you're caught in an embarrassing lack of understanding of the basics of this problem, you choose not to answer and keep blowing smoke in a different direction.
Do you or do you not understand the role that the light cone plays in the discussion of causality?
This is, of course, a rethorical question, as it's pretty obvious you do not:
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(my emphasis.)
For two arbitrary events, A and B, A can be in the future light cone of B, A can be in the past light cone of B, or A and B can be space-like separated --ie. either one of them is outside the overall light cone of the other.
Space-like separated events are never, --repeat, never-- on the same light cone.
Events in the same light cone are causally connected. It is for events outside their respective light cones that any discussion of non-locality would make any sense. You are shockingly ignorant of the concept of causality, and of many other physical concepts.
Do some explaining and self-correcting, please, because last time you said something about this, you got it completely backwards. And stop blowing smoke.
Bad as it is, ignorance is not your problem. Your problem is you think you actually understand something, and are incapable of acknowledging your ignorance. Your problem is the --highly intellectually toxic-- combination of hubris and ignorance.
Another possibility is that two space-like separated events are both on the same (future) light cone of a previous event thus including both in the absolute future of such antecedent event. Or both are on the same (past) light cone of a subsequent event, thus including both in the absolute past of such subsequent event.
None of these qualifications is in your language. You are either sloppy, or deliberately ambiguous, or both.