What utter crap!
If I throw a ball to the ground it will go faster than freefall. Nobody is claiming the towers fell faster than freefall.
You're not claiming it, but many CTists have.
That's the point.
What utter crap!
If I throw a ball to the ground it will go faster than freefall. Nobody is claiming the towers fell faster than freefall.
Name one of these arguments.
Nobody is claiming the towers fell faster than freefall.
Uhm, not that isn't the point. The point is that "faster than freefall" is technically mixing terms, because "faster" is a term applied to velocity, and freefall is an acceleration. I do, however, think that Dr Adequate is being a teensy-bit over pedantic about that. The current C theory is that the building falls at freefall, consequently all the floors must have been pulverised before it fell.... you know, I can't even carry on typing it because it makes so little sense.Glenn B said:
The current C theory is that the building falls at freefall, consequently all the floors must have been pulverised before it fell.... you know, I can't even carry on typing it because it makes so little sense.
Nobody is claiming the towers fell faster than freefall.
NO. FREEFALL IS NOT A VELOCITY.What utter crap!
If I throw a ball to the ground it will go faster than freefall.
So, you're a liar as well as a fool.Nobody is claiming the towers fell faster than freefall.
If I throw a ball to the ground it will go faster than freefall.
Well then reality is wrong!You will find that reality will disagree with you if you are confident that 'free-fall' is a velocity.
Screw metres per second! I wanna see this calculated in furlongs per millennium! Or leagues per month!
What utter crap!
If I throw a ball to the ground it will go faster than freefall. Nobody is claiming the towers fell faster than freefall.
Judy Wood, a mechanical engineer, has observed that even objects in free fall, encountering only air resistance would require at least 12 seconds to hit the ground, which means that the buildings were actually destroyed in a speed faster than freefall.
Galactic lengths per nanosecond
In the Hustler article, second page:
Then again, that article also says Jones was peer-reviewed, and that termite is commonly used in the demolition industry!