No analogy can be pushed to far, but it still holds here. Sure, you can talk about "the truck" as being thirty minutes out or you can talk about "500 widgets" being here in thirty minutes. But that doesn't make "a truck" the same as "500 widgets" any more than "a barrel" is the same thing as the oil it contains. They merely have a fixed conversion factor between them -- 500 widgets per truck, 42 gallons of oil per barrel, -1.602E-19 coulombs per electron.-This was very helpful, but I still don't see why I am wrong to SEE the following:
If you need UPS trucks to take the widgets to the factory, then until said widgets are unloaded off the truck at the factory dock they should labeled as one. when the factory shipper/receiver calls UPS for information on the widgets the dispatch will tell him " the truck is 30 min. away " never once did the dispatcher mention the widgets or even felt the need to because between the dispatcher and the shipper they both UNDERSTOOD that the truck and the widgets at that point were the " same " thing, not like they were fused together or anything but it's like, if the truck is on the way, so is the cargo.
Same with the OP, if electrons are the only carrier of - charge in the wire, which is the only charge that the load uses as force to do work, then ELECTRON FLOW should be labeled as the only ELECTRICAL ENERGY FLOW in wire.