I don't believe the upper blozk could have done it either. Heiwa has done sterling work of embarrassing you guys by proving that you can neither design a model that will perform as Bazant predicts nor can you provide a single example of a small fraction of a building crushing the rest of that building down level with the ground. This is not surprising considering that it has never before happened in the entire world history of construction on this planet.
Brave confident and empty talk is all you have.Models ?...zero. Precedent ?....zero. Common sense ?...zero.
Common sense, huh?
OK, try this:
You have a mass - whatever the mass of block C was - and it can be anything you want. Feathers, rocks, bowling balls, a meteorite. Drop that mass C from twenty feet onto a single-story building A. Will it crush the building, yes or no?
Now how about a two-story building B. Will it crush both stories, yes or no?
Now, here's the thing: when it impacts with the upper story (building A), the mass of story A is added to C. So now B is being hit with A+C. Some momentum is lost, but mass is gained, which increases the force involved.
Now the third story is hit with A+B+C mass. And so on, and so forth.
As the mass increases, so does the impact force and hence the velocity.
Additionally, each impact from floor to floor acts as a mini-jolt along the entire structure, weakening joints and trusses and all those nasty engineering thingies that fall apart if you keep whacking them hard enough.
So sooner rather than later, those thingies are going to give, and give hard.
Collapse is emminent.
Maybe if the core had been made of steel-reinforced concrete, it MIGHT have stood... but even then, not bloody likely.