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"Loose Change" and the David Ray Griffin talk at Madison.
I won't write you back if you use "CT" again. It is my personal opinion that charging someone with being conspiracy theorist is a way of dismissing them out of hand. If you find me painfully naive about engineering, physics, and building design then you needn't reply.
> Some easy questions: How fast did the WTC fall? How fast would you > expect them to fall from a pancake? Surely there are some hard > numbers on those CT websites you read. According to "Loose Change" the WTC (both towers) fell in 10 seconds. Haven't got a clue about the 'pancake theory' -
> MIT engineers calculated that the dynamic loading on the support > columns from the collapsing building was over 60 times their > designed static weight loading. That is useful = Thanks.
> what horizontal force do you propose was present that would make the > building fall sideways? The plane that hit the South tower hit at the southeast corner - that corner should've collapsed first, causing floors above it to tilt sideways as a result of the support beams being knocked out at that corner. Conjecture, yes. Out of the realm of reality, no. I have seen houses burning that collapsed in similar ways - if the burn started on one corner, that corner caved in first. Different deal with 110-story skyscrapers? Perhaps. I'm not trying to resist gravity.
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