I love how the fact that you’re not able to reconstruct the exact process of the collapse working backward from the rubble is taken as further evidence of a conspiracy that cleverly anticipated your forensic efforts, by creating difficult-to-interpret rubble (do you really think a tall building can fall over in such a way as to leave things intact? that’s a lot of energy), and “quickly” disposing of rubble (“quickly” means nothing—compared to what? initially they hoped to find survivors, later work may have come quickly so folks could have the feeling of doing something about the catastrophe).
When an airplane crashes, the wreckage is preserved in painstaking detail, often re-assembled in warehouses in exactly the configuration it was found at the crash site, in order to determine exactly what went wrong.
You would think that when a 47 story skyscraper spontaneously collapses, a wholly unprecedented event, that this engineering failure would be investigated even MORE thoroughly. But instead, it’s simply melted down in blast furnaces, over the objections of the victims’ families and, among others, fire engineering magazine, which said something like “this destruction of evidence must stop immediately”.
If you’re referring to WTC 7, it didn’t spontaneously collapse, it collapsed because of a fire. There was 91 000 liters of diesel fuel stored in that building for generators. Anyway, a few years ago a similar university building collapsed in Netherlands I believe. Even if it didn’t, just because something happens the first time, doesn’t mean the official report is wrong. A lot of things happen the first time, like a nuclear plant has exploded only once in history.
I love how the fact that you’re not able to reconstruct the exact process of the collapse working backward from the rubble is taken as further evidence of a conspiracy that cleverly anticipated your forensic efforts, by creating difficult-to-interpret rubble (do you really think a tall building can fall over in such a way as to leave things intact? that’s a lot of energy), and “quickly” disposing of rubble (“quickly” means nothing—compared to what? initially they hoped to find survivors, later work may have come quickly so folks could have the feeling of doing something about the catastrophe).
When an airplane crashes, the wreckage is preserved in painstaking detail, often re-assembled in warehouses in exactly the configuration it was found at the crash site, in order to determine exactly what went wrong.
You would think that when a 47 story skyscraper spontaneously collapses, a wholly unprecedented event, that this engineering failure would be investigated even MORE thoroughly. But instead, it’s simply melted down in blast furnaces, over the objections of the victims’ families and, among others, fire engineering magazine, which said something like “this destruction of evidence must stop immediately”.
If you’re referring to WTC 7, it didn’t spontaneously collapse, it collapsed because of a fire. There was 91 000 liters of diesel fuel stored in that building for generators. Anyway, a few years ago a similar university building collapsed in Netherlands I believe. Even if it didn’t, just because something happens the first time, doesn’t mean the official report is wrong. A lot of things happen the first time, like a nuclear plant has exploded only once in history.
The NIST report states that fuel had nothing to do with the collapse.
So we can all have it as a reference instead of vaguely referring to it, here’s a summary: http://www.nist.gov/public_affairs/factsheet/wtc_qa_082108.html