TellyKNeasuss
Illuminator
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2006
- Messages
- 3,787
218 feet for both WTC 1 and 2, and they were square in cross-section. Must have been tight on space in there!
Maybe they were TARDISes.
218 feet for both WTC 1 and 2, and they were square in cross-section. Must have been tight on space in there!
I've been trying to point that out to you people!
Wow, the welders knew they were putting up a building loaded with C4? That's... incredible.
Really? Where would all this torsion be coming from?
Totally. It's like there's a whole side thread (or five) going alongside the main one. Christophera just kind of ignores everything not related to his quest and whoever is in his sights at a given time, leaving the rest of us free to talk about whatever. It's fun.
I've learned a lot too. Especially about mental illness. You could call it first hand experience, I suppose.
I just starting reading this as a lurker, and got sucked in. Once I joined, I just had to post here... I couldn't help it.
Sarcasm aside, the idea was that they had to have welders that they could tell that the rebar was coated with C4 or othrewise a welder might try and cut corners and not remove enough of the coating or not shield the coating properly, ......then ... BOOM, and BOOM, and BOOM, big problem.
Plus, as a bonus, people other than Chris post pictures and links that are sometimes interesting. When I got here, (and I have absolutely no recollection of how that happened!) I had very little CT knowledge, or really any of the facts that they have spun off of. Now I've learned about architecture, explosives, mental illnesses...
same here, chris is a great resource for debunk noobs. i would recommend all skeptic rookies, as i was a few weeks ago, to browse this thread for good hints on the activity......all the hallmarks of debunkability are here.......unfalsifiability, get-out clauses, embellishment, etc etc.
look at this list from Carl Sagan's Baloney Detection Kit i would bet that most, if not all, are present somewhere in christophera's postings here.
Common fallacies of logic and rhetoric
perhaps architect is right, this is all just an art project by mr brown to see how many of the above he can get away with. hasn't done very well though has he?
- Ad hominem - attacking the arguer and not the argument.
- Argument from "authority".
- Argument from adverse consequences (putting pressure on the decision maker by pointing out dire consequences of an "unfavourable" decision).
- Appeal to ignorance (absence of evidence is not evidence of absence).
- Special pleading (typically referring to god's will).
- Begging the question (assuming an answer in the way the question is phrased).
- Observational selection (counting the hits and forgetting the misses).
- Statistics of small numbers (such as drawing conclusions from inadequate sample sizes).
- Misunderstanding the nature of statistics (President Eisenhower expressing astonishment and alarm on discovering that fully half of all Americans have below average intelligence!)
- Inconsistency (e.g. military expenditures based on worst case scenarios but scientific projections on environmental dangers thriftily ignored because they are not "proved").
- Non sequitur - "it does not follow" - the logic falls down.
- Post hoc, ergo propter hoc - "it happened after so it was caused by" - confusion of cause and effect.
- Meaningless question ("what happens when an irresistible force meets an immovable object?).
- Excluded middle - considering only the two extremes in a range of possibilities (making the "other side" look worse than it really is).
- Short-term v. long-term - a subset of excluded middle ("why pursue fundamental science when we have so huge a budget deficit?").
- Slippery slope - a subset of excluded middle - unwarranted extrapolation of the effects (give an inch and they will take a mile).
- Confusion of correlation and causation.
- Straw man - caricaturing (or stereotyping) a position to make it easier to attack..
- Suppressed evidence or half-truths.
- Weasel words - for example, use of euphemisms for war such as "police action" to get around limitations on Presidential powers. "An important art of politicians is to find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the public"
:-]
BV
Yes. For a while I was finding at least one a day, and pointing them out.got any other gems?
After the fact interpretation is what words are for, even those who spoke them.
I've documented two explosions in different areas at the same time, Here is a third. Remember Phillip Morelli?
http://www.ny1.com/pages/RRR/911special_survivors.html
Construction worker in the WTC Phillip Morelli (37 years old on 9-11-1) describes being thrown to the ground by two explosions while in the fourth subbasement of the North Tower. The first, which threw him to the ground and seemed to coincide with the plane crash, was followed by a larger blast that again threw him to the ground and this time blew out walls. He then made his way to the South Tower and was in the subbasement there when the second plane hit, again associated with a powerful underground blast. This is one of a series of interviews with WTC survivors done by NY1 News: ny1.com/pages/RRR/911special_survivors.htmlRemember
Not so interchangeble in the construction/engineering world, particuarly in the demolition world, and given these circumstances, engineers will always borrow the terms from the demo world. A truck load of concrete is never called debris unless it is "concrete debris" or "hard debris" it is always "rubble" which means there may be some bricks and stone in with the concrete. Rubble is actually an old term that referres to permeable hard backfill.
it is really a test of the forum engine
so how was the concrete core poured Chris
3rd time I've answered this.
The concrete was pumped up through the core from a small batch plant built onsite.
this thread is like a novel already, and yes, every single one of his objections has been answered multiple times, usually in picture AND text w/sources sited. its not worth discussing anymore.
Thanks, that must of been 7,078 posts ago
But there was no concrete core so you can relax. Your entire web page is based on lies. Kind of ironic. But so true you are the last one in the entire world who thinks the core is concrete.
You are the only one.
urdeonly1
My requests for reasonable explanations of what the materials are comprising these structuresIMAGE which look like concrete and can only be concrete HAVE NEVER BEEN reasonably responded to.
Well Chris, there's a small problem there. You see the lift machinery at WTC generally went at the top of the shafts. So there's no point in installing them until you get to the plant level. On construction sites, we use temporary lifts pretty much until the final fitting out stage. Yes, even in tall buildings.
Bollocks..
Why do you think that they look like concrete?
You and Belz can start the "Galactic Psychic Society" <snip>
I knew you were going to suggest that.
It isn't clear that there is a wall there. The color in between what you are calling the end of the wall and what your are calling hallways is the about the same as the color of the debris cloud to the outside of this area. And where is the top of the wall? There is no clear vertical boundary.
And even if it is a wall, it is no thicker than your "interior box column". This would make it about 2-3 feet wide, right?