It's always entertaining to watch the process by which unsupportable assertions descend into total, utter, unarguable lunacy. Heiwa, what you're suggesting is that the upper block should have shifted sideways so that none of the columns were aligned, but remained upright. It should then have fallen till the columns impacted the floors, then... what?
I think we have to go to multiple choice here.
Did the floors (a) suddenly acquire the ability to support the 30,000 ton weight of the upper block, or (b) collapse?
Choose (a) and you're clearly insane. Let's assume (b).
Now, even if the upper block shifted sideways, it must have rested on the lower block at two specific points, where the perimeter columns crossed each other.
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/1476447daaa50d8833.jpg[/qimg]
This must have concentrated the entire weight of the upper block on two column trees of the perimeter structure. Did these column trees either (a) suddenly increase in strength by over 20 times and support the upper block all by themselves, or (b) fail under the additional load?
Again, choose (a) and you're clearly insane. Choose (b) and suddenly the perimeter column structure is starting to collapse.
Of course, none of this actually happened, because the upper block actually tilted as it fell, giving the additional result that oblique impacts occurred between formerly vertical columns. However, even if we imagine that the upper block miraculously just shifted a small amount sideways and stayed upright throughout the collapse, it's still geometrically impossible for all the columns to have missed each other, and this is obvious to anyone with a kindergarten level understanding of geometry.
Heiwa's explanations are getting more insane with every post.
Dave