Denial! You ask for what you know does not exist.
You refuse to accept that he is telling the truth. You are effectively calling him a liar too.
No. He is quite capable of recognizing a steel girder when he sees one.
"Abolhassan Astaneh should know. He's a professor of civil engineering at the University of California at Berkeley and was one of the leading structural engineers who studied the collapse of the World Trade Center on 9/11."
He said: "[FONT="]I saw melting of girders in World Trade Center[/FONT][FONT="].[/FONT]"
The cladding does NOT look like steel girders.
You are trying to say Abolhassan Astaneh can't tell the difference between a steel girder and aluminum cladding.
You are being silly. Give it up.
Source your hearsay. Source.
A reporter made up the melted girders, not DR A, the reporter; proof, the photo of what Dr A is looking at, burnt steel, not melted steel; the reporter is making up the melted part!An engineer investigating the remains of the World Trade Center sees melted girders and other evidence that the towers experienced extreme temperatures on 9/11. Dr. Abolhassan Astaneh-Asl is a professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of California, Berkeley.
Hearsay. But please give us your source;
Oops, Dr A says fire destroyed the WTC complex. Oops; there goes the thermite delusion down the drain. I agree with your expert the WTC was destroyed by fire, your expert from Berkley says so.Abolhassan Astaneh should know. He's a professor of civil engineering at the University of California at Berkeley and was one of the leading structural engineers who studied the collapse of the World Trade Center on 9/11.
ABOLHASSAN ASTANEH, University of California, Berkeley: In both of them, basically, the fire was the reason why steel got soft and weak and collapsed. In both of them, I feel that we, as engineers, if we had looked at them and learned the lessons, we could really apply these lessons to build safe structures.
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