9/11 Chewy Defense
Banned
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2007
- Messages
- 3,593
Bolding mine:
Afraid?
Yes, you are afraid to be found a fraud.
In response to your requests for me to show you everything I have, I have planned a seminar on December 1st. I didn't think of the seminar before I came to JREF, but it seemed the only way I could really do things right.
And what is the right thing to do? Spread paranoia, make up fantastic stories that don't relate to you being on a road trip with your friend, or just spewing garbage to the masses & not give any shred of evidence to prove what you claim true?? Which is it???
I want to show you the evidence that my samples came from the WTC. I want to show you the evidence that my samples match the published literature on the dust. I want to show you that my samples are heterogeneous on a macro and micro scale. I want to show you that some of my samples are metallic and magnetic.
Show it to everyone on this forum, not to me, but to everyone. What's there to hide? Unless you don't feel like being shamed upon because you lack the evidence to prove what you claim.
NONE of this is going to be debunkable. The contamination issue might get me. The age of the samples might get me. Those are real weaknesses in my theory. But nothing in the paragraph above is weak.
Actually, since you admit that it's contaminated, you just proved that it's debunkable without so much as an arguement from yourself.
Let's say the samples are contaminated. Does this mean that they are different from the samples of published researchers, who also scooped the dust off the ground where they found it? No. It means that they are the same. My samples are exactly as old as the other samples, too. Just the analysis on them was begun at a later time.
Yes, they are different because you didn't preserve the sample, you admitted that it's contaminated. Case closed!
My samples are not perfect, but no real life samples ever are, and I say this coming from dozens of years in research laboratories working on samples. You want to talk about contamination? With living tissue, contamination isn't an abstract worry. It's a constant worry, but you don't necessarily throw out your samples, even if they do become contaminated. You just need to know how to accommodate the contamination.
Then why didn't you seal the sample so that it wouldn't get contaminated?
(snipped)
Getting closer to the idea of a perfect sample:
It would have been the best, scientifically, to capture a representative sample of the dust that evolved from the World Trade Center as it was destroyed. In order to have done that, I would need to have had some way to capture the dust that went straight up into the sky, and I would have had to develop a way to........
Dust doesn't "evolve" unless you contaminate it with something. You've already proved that your case has no merit.
