You're right that I'm confused by idiocy, just not my idiocy. You start with a straw man "you believe that the building could only be in freefall if the supports were blown up by explosives?". I don't believe that at all. I know that the building could only be in free fall if all supports were removed simultaneously. Explosives are the most reasonable culprit. You paraphrase that straw man then try to support it with a complete falsehood: "you don't believe that freefall implies simultaneous removal of supports".
Right, let's expand on the thought experiment I outlined earlier.
I think we can all agree from the above that cmatrix's claim is that "the building could only be in free fall if all supports were removed simultaneously"; I hope we can all agree that this implies the claim that, if the supports were
not removed simultaneously, then the building could
not have been in freefall. I'd like to examine that claim a little further.
Suppose we have a building supported by nine columns, each 100m high, and that each of these supports is rigged for demolition with three charges, at top, middle and bottom, such that the detonation of a set of three charges will completely remove the support of the column. Suppose, also, that each of these charges and its associated control mechanism is sufficiently robust that it will not be damaged should the support collapse that it's attached to. Now, let's blow each column in turn, at 0.25 second intervals; this is a sufficient spacing that the removal of the columns cannot be regarded as simultaneous.
After two seconds, whatever has happened in the meantime due to load transfer and progressive collapse, we may be certain that the building has no support whatsoever, because all nine sets of charges have fired and all supports must therefore have been severed. However, we may also be certain that it has fallen, at most, 20 metres from its initial height, as this is the furthest it could have fallen had it dropped at freefall from the moment the first column was destroyed. We therefore have a building 80 metres in the air, not supported in any way whatsoever. At what rate is this building accelerating downwards?
I think we all know it must be accelerating at 1g, neglecting air resistance. According to cmatrix, however, it
cannot be accelerating at 1g, because
the supports were not removed simultaneously, therefore the building cannot be in freefall.
I don't expect cmatrix to understand this - or, indeed, anything. But it's a classic example of how clinging to irrational conspiracist dogma based on a total misunderstanding of the most basic laws of physics will lead to a propensity for making utterly absurd claims.
Dave