You have two observers, moving directly opposite each other.
Each has a flashlight pointing back at the other.
The speed of the light from those torched is the same for both observers.
(Instead the light would be red-shifted.)
Add a third observer, stationary to one and moving towards the other. As the third observer passes that observer, the speed of light from their flashlight never changes, and it’s the same speed as from the other two. (Instead it would go from being blue shifted to red shifted.)
You have two observers, moving directly opposite each other.
Each has a flashlight pointing back at the other.
The speed of the light from those torched is the same for both observers.
(Instead the light would be red-shifted.)
Add a third observer, stationary to one and moving towards the other. As the third observer passes that observer, the speed of light from their flashlight never changes, and it’s the same speed as from the other two. (Instead it would go from being blue shifted to red shifted.)
This adds substantially more questions than it answers.
-Scientists after discovering General Relativity