Thanks for acknowledging some agreement and the objectivity in my post.
In contrast with the first paragraph above quoted and commented upon, the second is, in my view, less objective. The first reason why it is less objective is that it tries to formulate a subjective conclusion; namely: whether Dick Oliver was confused. I do not think it appropriate to try to go in that direction.
By "confused" I merely meant that he didn't know what he had heard, one way or another. May I quote:
"
...we heard a wishhhhhh. I didn’t know what it was. Then we heard a crash... I said, “Wow, it looks like either something hit it or something exploded out of it.”"
I think you can agree that this is what Oliver said, and presumably meant? That he did not know what it was?
Secondly, let's consider the presumed phenomenon, which is that a widebody jetliner had onrushed from north to south on the west side of Manhattan, 1000ft up at close to 500mph. Jetliners are an everyday sound, albeit, not at the speed or noise level caused by full throttle engines -- an ear shattering 140dB. Yet, it is more fairly said, I think, that because jets are everyday occurrences, people know them when they hear them.
This is your subjective opinion. It is, as such, nearly worthless.
You should really do some work and present an objective analysis on what noise level to expect from a 767 given the plane configuration and speed, features of the topology of lower Manhattan, and the geometry of the flight path. This involves some sience and math and reference to measured values both for 767-type planes and the psychology of city dwellers with regard to noises.
Dick Oliver did not recognize a jet from what he heard. That much is an objective conclusion.
Correct.
Another objective conclusion is: He did not rule out a jet from what he heard.
Both conclusions are covered by the statement "
I didn’t know what it was"
Agreed?
So, the better inference, quite frankly, is that because the sound heard on the mic, via youtube, is neither loud enough, nor of the right pitch for a jet and because Dick Oliver did not recognize it as a jet, it, the sound, was not that of a jet.
Again, this inference is purely subjective and not shared by anybody else yet. Repeating your very subjective opinion on the meaning of Dick Olivers subjective reporting of his subjective impressions, as he subjectively remembers them, clearly will not get us very far in establiching the physical facts.
As for your subjective opinion that the sound in the video is not loud enough: That is your opinion, and yours alone so far. You need to substantiate that objectively. I believe the only or best way to do so would be to establish the topology of the scene, geometry of the flight path, properties of a 767 in flight, and use physics to determine a plausible range for the expected loudness.
That inference -- not a jet -- is further supported by the reactions of the passersby in the video and by the second statement of the cameraman "it was just an explosion."
Again, the lack of reaction can be explained in more than one way, both using physics (the sound of a plane might not be expected to be as loud as you opine) and psychology (New York passerbyers are subjected to a lot of noises every day).
If I understand you to say it is not possible to answer why Oliver did not correct his cameraman, then, in that event, I think the quoted answer is objective and reasonable.
I think we are in agreement here.
The above is wide-ranging and therefore not easily sorted out, especially in a message board context. Put succinctly, the last conclusion is not well-supported by what precedes it. This refers to the last statement: "Taking the whole body of what we know already, no-plane is preposterous".
No, that is not a well-formed conclusion at all.
I disagree. You can't tackle evidence one by one and ignore so much. It has been pointed out to you that your subjective conclusion "no plane" stands against a very large body of evidence that does in fact point to a plane impacting WTC1. Let me repeat some:
- The
Naudet video: Jules Naudet, in the presence of NYFD chief Joseph Pfeiffer, records the sound of a plane flying by; everybody in the video looks up to search for the source of the sound. Obvisously, Naudet himself sees something that makes him pan his camera towards the WTC. There, we see a "blob" entering the north tower, immediately followed by an explosion.
- CNN's vice-president for finances,
Sean Murtagh relates in no unclear terms 3-4 minutes after the impact live on TV what he saw with his very own eyes from the 21st floor of 5 Penn Plaza: A large commercial airliner, with two engines, possibly a 737, flying low over the island of Manhattan, wings wiggling, slamming straight into one of the towers.
- The NTSB did an extensive analysis of plenty of radar data of all 4 planes, and established their flight paths. AA11 got lost over or very close to NYC, according to publicly available data, which
progge linked to in an earlier post today.
- American Airlines and United Airlines must be missing 2 planes each, because if they had all their planes safely accounted for on 9/11, there would be way to many people crying foul (pilots, maintenance crews, caterers, management, share holders, insurance companies).
- Remains of at least 46 of the people supposed to have been aboard AA11 when it took off in Boston were found in the rubble at and around ground zero and have been
identified through DNA testing.
- There is seismic data consistent with the impact and energy (I am talking specific and objective physical properties with numbers here) of a 767 at around 450 mph crashing in lower Manhattan.
- In the AAH-thread on the current topic, we have seen pictures of plane parts among the debris around the WTC after the first impact. The NTSB states on their site that they gave their expertise to help identify plane parts in all 3 (or 4, if you count the towers separately) sites (see progge's post, linked above).
You must not ignore all of this context and cannot rely solely on your subjective interpretations of subjective reactions, or lack thereof. You definitely need a stronger standard of evidence!
Let's examine the statement "sounded like a plane crash."
Frankly, few people have actually ever heard a plane crash because that is not an everyday experience. True, people may have seen it in the movies, but how realistic is that?
Another thing:
Plane crashes do not sound alike. One crashing into water, as often happens, will not sound the same as one crashing in fields or in residential areas. The puddle jumper plane that crashed in Manhattan, taking the life of, I believe it was a major league baseball player, a couple years ago, probably did not sound the same as the crash sound into the North Tower.
Indeed, the principle reason why the cameraman said "sounded like a plane crash' is very likely based on where the sound came from, namely, above. Others, however, thought it was either a missile or, at most, a small plane and not a jetliner.
You might be right.
It is, in
my opinon, just as likely that he based his opinion on his hearing a plane just before the crash.
Either proposition is just a subjective opinion, correct?
In fact, both might be right at the same time.
I am surprised by the above reply because the reply does not properly examine the appropriateness of the underlying question, which was:
"C: Should a person making these "no-plane" claims (considering the bulk of evidence against his claim) be expected to back his claims with extraordinary, irrefutable proof considering the extraordinary nature of the claim?"
Come on! That is not a properly phrased query by any means. It is loaded, stacked against and presumptuous in the extreme. The strength of the underlying common storyline cannot be presumed in that manner. Furthermore, one wonders why do proponents of the common storyline think they need to tilt the balance in their favor to such an extraordinary degree in the first place? It can fairly be said that those who support the common storyline seem to want a 10 shot handicap at the start of a nine hole round of golf. Is the common storyline weaker than I thought it was?
I refer to the bulk of evidence for the common storyline; I presented a selection thereof above: Video, eyewitnesses, NTSB-analysis, seismic data, DNA evidence, photos of plane parts, ...
The strength of the common storyline is not presumed but well established.
The above has hallmarks of 'rhetoric'...
I can guarantee you that my statement was not the least bit meant as rhetoric. I must say that I feel slightly indignated at this unkind presumption on your part.
...and so I need to double check for accuracy of understanding:
Are you suggesting you're willing to search the database of information in search of an alternative theory, or do you mean you want someone else to put one forward so that you may then question it?
Absolutely yes to both!
I am absolutely open to any and all evidence anyone might put forward, whether it supports or conflicts with the common theory. However, I have yet to see any evidence that clearly is in conflict with the common storyline and can not be easily reconciled with it.
I am also absolutely open to any new theory and very willing to test its merits - because that is precisely the scientific method! An incumbent theory will be replaced by an alternative theory if and only if someone proposes such an alternative, AND it explains the ALL of the known observations better than the incumbent. If a ney hypothesis fails that test, the old one remains standing, even if it contains inconsistencies or some not yet explained observations.
We are ALL dying to learn a new theory! We really really are!
Just a warning: Simply suggesting "DEW", without specifying what kind of weapon has done what, how, from where, will not do. Not by a longshot.
He did not use the words "at that time". True, you are not definite in saying those words were within his statement, but, your sentence is not clear in that respect.
You are right, "at that time" were my words, not his.
The point of Dick Oliver's statement is that he describes the characteristics of the sound that he had in mind that, quite frankly, are not the actually characteristic of the sound in the video. Thus, I contend that Dick Oliver was dismissing the ordinary bus sound and, in fact, heard something else that is not readily heard on the video, absent very close scruthiny and, perhaps, technical assessment with professional equipment.
You may contend anything as your heart wishes, the whole day long, and continue to do so until death doth thee part from your very private, subjective opinions. However, your subjective interpretation of what Dick Oliver did NOT say about his subjective experiences, is just that: your subjective interpretation. It bears no weight whatsoever in this discussion.
The sound in the video is only marginally, at best, described as a wishhhhh and is, instead, consistent with a hodge-podge of sound, as I presently "hear" it.
Come on, don't tip-toe around the obvious: There is no "wishhhhh" sound, and Dick Olivers recollection of it is in all likelihood imprecise. Eyewitness testimomies tend to be that way!
Posters here have been very reluctant to concede that the buses sitting next to the curb are a factor at all.
I suggest that objectivity demands that some consideration be given to the buses, posters. Let me float this idea:
Would posters be willing to consider that the sound of the buses might have obscured and/or combined with the sound generated by whatever caused the explosion?
You have been very reluctant to concede that the plane that was filmed by Naudet, seen by Sean Murtagh, heard by the lady in blue and the camera man, missed by American Airlines, tracked by the NTSB, recorded by the Columbia University seismological equipment, taken by the passengers who boarded in Boston and ended as human remains at ground zero, and that left debris near the towers, is a factor at all.
Would you be willing to consider that what sounds like a plane might, in fact, be a plane?
Frankly, the sound is simply not loud enough to assume any part of it is caused by a jetliner 1000ft up and at close to 500mph. Upon that contention, I will stand.
This contention represents your, and only your, subjective opinion. It is, as such, worthless.
However, whatever caused the hole in the North Tower and the explosion there almost certainly did have a sound and a descriptor of that sound as a "wishhhhh" but not a descriptor that says "jet" is a clue as to what that sound was and what that sound was not.
Where do you derive this certainty from? Surely not from the video - there is no significant "whishhhhh" in it. You base your entirely subjective opinion on one thing only: the subjective account of the way Dick Oliver remembered a subjective experience.
Do you have any recording, or any other witness, corroborating that observation to near-certainty? Then the time to present that evidence is now.
Dick Oliver did not think he heard a jet or a jetliner.
He also never said that what he heard was not a plane. He simply did not know. One person's ignorance is a weak basis for your entirely subjective opinions indeed.
The above is too subjective to be meaningful, in my view.
But that is the precise point of my statement: Witness testimonies are always, necessarily, a very subjective thing! You must always always be skeptic about witness accounts! Memory is a tricky thing!
Well, posters, there it is, coming at the end of the post. The above is a fair and an objective statement, in most respects, and it is an important one. For whatever Dick Oliver may be said to have heard, he does not describe the sound of a jetliner and he also does not describe the sound that is actually heard in the video. To the extent I would dispute the above quote is in connection with the subjective and speculative claims that Dick Oliver is "imprecise" and/or "misremembers." We have no objective basis for making those statements, in my view. Rather, we have a basis for saying Dick Oliver is a source who confirms there was no jetliner 1000ft up at a speed of close to 500mph because he heard no such thing. That is what we may fairly say, posters.
No, that is not at all fair to say.
Dick oliver does NOT at all confirm positively there was no airliner. Imprecision is the hallmark of ALL human perception and memory. You can not conclude that A exists from just one witness who is unsure of what he witnessed, when against that one ignorant witness you have a body of hard, objective evidence, and witnesses who are VERY sure about what they saw!