Two things:
- As many others have pointed out multiple times, when the floor is removed, the lateral bracing for the perimeter is removed, and structural integrity is compromised. The columns would at that point fail to remain vertical on their own accord, nevermind the fact that the upper section is falling on them.
- Whatever the perimeter columns' load bearing capacity is, it's a capacity for static loads. Not the moving, accelerating load it experienced on 9/11!
I'm not even an engineer, and I
still understand this. You're an engineer, and you ignore it. At times, the things you say makes me wonder if you really believe the stuff you peddle about 9/11, or if this isn't just some silly game to you. Because frankly, I can't see a practiced engineer not realizing those points, and regardless of our jokes about your professional skill, you
are a practiced, employed engineer. This cannot fail to escape you. Again, I'm a
layman, and these points are clear as day to me.
Why do you argue around what logic makes so clear?