Question about photons and relative velocity.

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From the reference point of a photon, at what velocity are the photons around it traveling at?

I'm asking it because doesn't light ALWAYS travel at light speed, no matter what the reference point? Does that principle only apply to things that are not photons or gravitational disturbances, or does it apply to absolutely everything?

I guess this is a rather dumb question, but confusing to me nonetheless.
 
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It's not clear to me what you mean by "photons around it", but the general answer to your question is that, yes, all photons have velocity c relative to any (inertial) coordinate systeml. However, since the time coordinate is singular at light speed, one photon does not "see" other photons moving away from it, even though they have velocity c relative to it.
 
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