You are attempting to use the least possible case where everything would miss the columns.
Of course, you are only doing so because you are forced to due to the extremely low resistance observed.

That "extremely low resistance"
averaged to about 0.5
g over the entire collapse.
Your extreme needs to have all of the uppers section's 69 million lb. mass miss all of the columns and fall just on the floors outside of the core, which could take 29 million lbs., so you can get down to the low resistance observed.

If the floors can only take 29 million pounds, and the upper mass is 69 million pounds, then I don't need
all the mass to miss, do I?
By the way, since you missed it the first dozen times, the 29 million pounds is wildly optimistic. That's the force to fail all the connections at once. The pressure for a broken column end to pierce the floors is far, far lower, and the trusses will buckle
en masse at about three million pounds.
Of course, you conveniently forget to mention the core itself and what role it would play in resisting the upper section's fall. I find it incredible that you can even keep a straight face while discussing this obvious nonsense.
I'm the straight man, Tony. You're the funny man. Stick to the script.
The flooring in the core is not much stronger than the trusses.
There is not a chance that the core columns would have been missed
Hope you're not a gambling man...
and it is highly unlikely that most of the perimeter coulmns would have been missed.
... even though we have pictures of it happening...
The very low resistance of 0.3g represents only about 10% of the column strength,
You're confusing
peak and
average, for the hundredth time. The resistance, even if I accept your number, is remarkably high -- most of it from momentum transfer, not strength, as presented in numerous corroborating peer-reviewed papers. You know this.
and it is proof that something unnatural was removing strength from the columns or rendering them ineffective, especially in the first several stories of the collapse.
"Something" that you dare not even articulate. Gremlins, I suppose?
You will never be able to analytically show what you propose and match observation, because it did not and could not happen the way you say it did.
Circular argument. And, sadly, that really is the best you can do.
Get a new act already.