I'm going to assume, just this once, that you're not being wilfully dishonest, and point out that FEMA's theory was that the collapse was initiated by pancaking as the floor trusses disconnected at one end and the floors fell on to the next one down. This was superseded by NIST's conclusion that the collapse was initiated by perimeter column bowing due to pull-in forces from sagging floor joists, the distinction being that FEMA's mechanism required the connections between floor and perimeter columns to have failed whereas NIST's was based on their having remained intact up to the moment of collapse initiation. Once collapse had initiated, there is no other rational interpretation than that the falling upper mass destroyed the lower structure in a crush-down process, and this is commonly (though perhaps rather loosely) described as pancaking. Therefore, using the word "pancake" to describe the collapse, rather than collapse initiation, does not disagree with either FEMA or NIST.
That's your free strike. Next time you bring this one up, I'll know you're being deliberately dishonest.
Dave