You write as if we understand everything. That is very, VERY improbable, from our ant-like point of view of the Universe, and considering how recently scientists began to understand even the most basic concepts--really just in the last hundred years or so.
It is a very dangerous--and I would say, unscientific--thing to say that something "applies to everything - no exceptions." Truly, we are at the edge of an ocean of knowledge, like ants on a leaf floating on a wavelet. We barely know "what's out there." We only barely understand our own DNA. As for subatomic particles, they do such strange, inexplicable things, that physicists plainly admit that they are mystified, and no one has yet come up with a 'unified theory.'
It's NOT a time to be dogmatic, to pretend that there are fixed "verities" that no one--not even a Nobel prize winner--dare challenge. That kind of thinking dumbs people down. Considering the breadth of the ferment in numerous sciences right now, I would advise you not to use words like "never" and "impossible" without that caveat "as far as we know now."