BigAl
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2007
- Messages
- 5,397
2--Look, posters, this is obvious: The common storyline of 9/11 DOES NOT call for the Concorde to have crashed into the North Tower.
The Concorde
2--Look, posters, this is obvious: The common storyline of 9/11 DOES NOT call for the Concorde to have crashed into the North Tower.
2--Look, posters, this is obvious: The common storyline of 9/11 DOES NOT call for the Concorde to have crashed into the North Tower.
jammonius:
Do you plan to address the questions as to how you decided the panel that (if it) fell from the towers would have left a particular?
.
Finally, in my view, I here assert the perimeter beam in the photo posted above shows no signficant damage to either the street or the sidewalk.
.Do you agree?
The Concordeiswas one the loudest jets around and familiar to many New Yorkers. If she just heard the loudest noise ever and compared it to the Concorde, I'd have to conclude she heard a 757/767 and not a bus or a subway or a Plymouth missing a muffler.
And how much damage SHOULD it have caused (and what you base this on).
I agree that you posted a lot of stuff to avoid answering the question I asked. Why?
Whether she said Concorde or Concourse or Comfort or Contort or Pompous or Cold Horse - who cares????
Why not talk about Our Lady of the Plane (OLP) who said "the plane that I just saw"?
As far as I know.First things first. Let's get agreement for sake of reference that;
1--Photo posted above is where perimeter beam with wheely "landed;" and
Sure.2--Photo posted above is accurate assessment of landing area; and
3--Photo posted above shows almost no damage whatsoever to sidewalk and street.
Idiom: Flogging a dead horse
Idiom Definitions for 'Flogging a dead horse'
If someone is trying to convince people to do or feel something without any hope of succeeding, they're flogging a dead horse. This is used when someone is trying to raise interest in an issue that no-one supports anymore; beating a dead horse will not make it do any more work.
British English British English | Category: Animals
View examples in Google: Flogging a dead horse
http://www.usingenglish.com/reference/idioms/flogging+a+dead+horse.html
By the way, from what I can gather, the thread has not run its course and posters are still engaging with one another.
You agree?
...
Another open issue is that of the testimony of Sgt. DeVona who saw the explosion from a vantage point of outside of WTC 5. The DeVona statement was posted as follows:
[qimg]http://i1008.photobucket.com/albums/af205/jfibonacci/album2/devona.jpg?t=1272799783[/qimg]
As to DeVona, his statement that he "heard an explosion" while standing outside of WTC 5 all but single handedly refutes the claim a jetliner crashed into that building.
...
Oystein did not calculate how the perimeter beam traversed across the area covered by that hotel without hitting it, and thus, his free-fall time calculation and related attempt to correlate to the sound in the Ginny Carr audio fails.
Finally, in my view, I here assert the perimeter beam in the photo posted above shows no signficant damage to either the street or the sidewalk.
Before going further into that forensic discussion, do you agree with my assessement the photo posted above of the perimeter beam with wheel stuck in it shows no signficant damage to the sidewalk or street where it is seen to by laying?
I'm waiting a more complete transcript of Ginny Carr's audio. I am also thinking about how we should name "Our Man who said Bomb" (OMB)to go along with whatever Our Lady of the Plane (OLP) actually said. The task is to be objective about the audio. So, for starters, I agree with you there is an OLP and there is also an OMB who has not been acknowledged as yet, together with OLC, to name some. I think we need to name all who can be reliably heard.
You agree?
Sorry. If you posted the above for my sake, I didn't mean to be taken quite so literally. I'm fully familiar with the idiom of speech. I was simply taking posters to task for posting at least 6 examples of it, by calling attention to the more literal content of the idiom; namely, that it references horses that have died or been killed.
My objective was to get posters to stop the excessive use of that idiom.
By the way, from what I can gather, the thread has not run its course and posters are still engaging with one another.
You agree?
Lakotah tribal wisdom says that when you discover you are riding a dead horse, the best strategy is to dismount. However, in such organizations such as government and business, other strategies are being tried, to wit:
1) Buying a larger whip.
2) Changing riders.
3) Saying things like, "This is the way we have always ridden this horse."
4) Appointing a committee to study the horse.
5) Arranging to visit other sites to see how they ride dead horses.
6) Creating a training session to improve riding skills.
7) Passing a resolution stating the horse is not dead.
8) Blaming the horse's parents.
9) Declaring that no horse is too dead to beat.
10) Providing additional funding to increase the horse's performance.
11) Harnessing several dead horses together to increase performance.
12) Conducting a study to see if private contractors can ride the dead horse cheaper.
13) Issuing a press release stating that the horse is "better, faster and cheaper" dead.
14) Forming a quality circle to find better uses for dead horses.
15) Revising performance goals for dead horses.
16) Insisting that this horse was procured with cost as an independent variable.
17) Promoting the horse to a supervisory position.
Wait a minute. In the above post, you simply cannot be serious. It is not just the Dick Oliver videos that put the issue of NO PLANE firmly and securely within the realm of reason, occurring as they do, on the day of 9/11/01, itself.
The fact of the matter is that all else that has ever been presented as being proof of a jetliner crash is utterly and completely indeterminate.
Here's another still from the Pavel Hlava video, with the help of "an arrow" used to alter the image in order to "point" to a nonexistent Boeing 767.
[qimg]http://i1008.photobucket.com/albums/af205/jfibonacci/firstplanelarge.jpg?t=1273081909[/qimg]
It is no different and no better in the Naudet video; it, too, is indeterminate. Plus, to resolve the doubt, there are the on the scene witnesses, many of whom I have both quoted and given colorful nicknames to, in order to help facilitate reality and to show that the evidence confirms there were no planes on 9/11 at the WTC. Keeping in mind, we've already done a full thread on Flight 93 and a tad on the Pentagon as well.
The Ginny Carr audio is also sitting in this thread and is under discussion. The capacity for denial and for rationalization has already been turned on full force in connection with that audio that cannot in any reasonable way be said to offer support for the claim a jetliner had crashed. And yet, the denial persists.
I'll bet there are posters here who will swear up and down on a stack of horses they will have slaughtered (please stop doing that, it is cruel) that they can see a Boeing 767 in the Pavel Hlava video.
That is rich.
Sorry. If you posted the above for my sake, I didn't mean to be taken quite so literally. I'm fully familiar with the idiom of speech. I was simply taking posters to task for posting at least 6 examples of it, by calling attention to the more literal content of the idiom; namely, that it references horses that have died or been killed.
My objective was to get posters to stop the excessive use of that idiom.
By the way, from what I can gather, the thread has not run its course and posters are still engaging with one another.
You agree?
I changed to dictionary meanings of the phrase when you complained about pictures of people flogging a dead horse. Since you are still flogging away. How about a poem on the subject?
