To be blunt, the point is that you do not understand basic electronics principles.
To control
current through any real-world load - which will have some finite resistance or impedance - you can control the
voltage drive across that and some form of current feedback sense resistor or transducer.
That in some variation is how pretty much all amplifier plus current control systems work, from small LED drivers to motor controllers rated at tens or hundreds of kilowatts.
Current sense resistor in series with the load, in a small circuit rated at a few watts:
View attachment 121287
The current feedback sense resistor in a servo drive we have on the bench at the moment (in the 5 - 10KW range), which is connected directly in series with the load:
View attachment 121285
The blue item in this photo are the current transducers use for feedback in a rather larger servo drive (possibly 50 - 100KW), again in the current path to the load:
View attachment 121286
Those are all variations of switched mode or PWM power systems, which could be called Class D if intended for audio.
My company has been installing and repairing such equipment for several decades and I have an extremely good understand of how such power control systems operate.
As you insist things do not work as they factually do, there is no point continuing.
Again - I'm done.