Christopher7
Philosopher
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2006
- Messages
- 6,538
You are in no position to second guess Mr. Voorsanger. He said there was molten steel in the "meteorite". He has inspected it up close. You have not.It's composed of materials with different melting points. Some of those constituents would melt well below the melting point of steel. In this case there may also have been many other materials and gasses mixed in with the rubble that could affect melting points.
Mr. Voorsenger's comment about the antenna not melting clearly reveals that he knew "the internal fires within the center of the towers" were capeable of melting steel.It's not so much a question of concrete coming into contact with molten steel, though. The problem is that the truthers are essentially saying that this rubble was in an oven that was hot enough to melt some steel yet leave other steel of similar composition intact.
Molten steel would not necessairly melt all the steel in the "meteorite". You don't know the conditions that created the "meteorite" so you can't make any judgments about what is in it or why some of the steel isn't melted.Curiously, the most obviously intact steel in these photos is not insulated by concrete. Remember that concrete/cement is used on steel as a fire insulator.
Your claim that the paper is 'unburned' is just plain silly. The paper was carbonized. The "meteorite" was "all fused by the heat into one single element".Aside from all that, the presence of unburned paper embedded in the rubble is a good indicator that it wasn't exposed to very high temperatures.
You are claiming to know better than Mr. Voorsanger.
You don't.
You are pathetically grasping for reasons to deny the existence of molten steel.