If special relativity causes magnetism to arise from the electric force, how does light work?
My understanding of light was perturbations in the electric field that cause perturbations in the magnetic field, which caused perturbations in the electric field and so on, resulting in a packet of energy that travels through space.
If, however, magnetism can be viewed as arising from relativistic length contractions due to different reference frames of moving objects (which I just stumbled across from Veritasium's video), how do we explain electromagnetic waves under that model? As I understand it, for relativistic effects to come into play there have to be two different reference frames moving at different speeds / directions. What are the reference frames at play here? As I see it, there's only the reference frame of the photon.
Also note, from How Special Relativity causes magnetism I understand there are different ways to view the relationship between magnetism, electricity, and relativity. I'm specifically asking about how light works from the perspective of "magnetism is just charges + relativity," even if there's a better way to frame how light works in general.