RedIbis
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2007
- Messages
- 6,899
And yet, still consistent with what Gravy said. These are minor quibbles on non-substantive points. He smelled a fuel-like smell. Ok... consistent with both Gravy's kerosene and your diesel. 100 feet away? Close enough; the point is that he was neither directly under the towers, nor in New Jersey. He was damned close. Gravy's narrative does not require him to have been precisely 100 feet away.
I have seen critiques where a statement, when examined, starts to unravel an entire story and expose it as a lie. I have also seen this "critique".
Quite a difference.
This is another example of a misquote that Gravy uses to support his hypothesis. I posted this in the other Gravy paper thread. It's sufficient for responding to this post as well as WildCat's.
As an example of Gravy's poor twisting of his words, there is this passage in Gravy's paper:
"There were jet fuel fireballs in the basement. Remember? You said this: 'When the explosion happened in the basement there was fire all over, and this guy tried to cover his face… '” (Video: William Rodriguez An American Hero. 2005, Snowshoe Films)
What Rodriguez calls an "explosion" Gravy concludes was "jet fuel fireballs".
Couldn't the explosion have been caused by something else?
