...and you found no surviver on B2 or B3. So we simply don't know if they had a trauma or were blown into pieces. Maybe the second including total incinerating because the pieces were not found or described or identified.
Please, bring facts, not speculation transformed into
your "truth".
B2 and B3 seem to be parkings, meaning they would probably be basically empty, yet we have this:
Male: ASAP, six-three, be advised, I have two ABM workers down here on the B2 between the red and the yellow lots. Be advised, I've got two ABM workers hurt. I need an ER ESP down here ASAP!
Male: Where do you need the assistance for the ABM workers?
Male: B2 between the red lot, and the yellow lot, the walkway where the ABM office is.
WTC Ch, 22 SHO PD Desk – 2131 p.4
Female: (inaudible) be advised, there is so much smoke on B2 west, we’re evacuating and we’re coming up!
Op. Cit. p.14 (note the references to the lots). No mention of a bomb, dead people, people in pieces, etc. No support for your fantasies.
(Thanks to
http://sites.google.com/site/911stories/insidethenorthtower:witnessaccounts,lobb for the references, which I could look up and complete.)
And you seem to have forgotten to comment on message #669.
I was trained to blow up bridges in the army. What do you know about bombs?
What do you know about deflagrations and behaviour of fire?
They DO NOT, under any circumstances, coat people with a Class B fuel and forget the little trees. So nobody and nothing was coated. A badly burnt woman from the lobby was burnt without seeing any fire.
Yet there is a PAPD policeman who dodged a fireball.
The fuel would just go around elevator cars.
...after it reached the cars first.
Indeed:
Gerry Wertz, a human resources executive at Marsh & McLennan, was in a north tower elevator when it stopped on the 91st floor. The only other passenger, artist Vanessa Lawrence, got out.
"She was stepping off the elevator when the plane hit," Wertz recalls. "There was an explosion on top of the elevator as if someone had thrown a hand grenade. I jumped out, fell to the floor and looked behind me. I saw the elevator disintegrate in a ball of flames and fall down (the shaft). There was a big hole in the ceiling above the elevator. I saw the cables fold up as if they'd become detached. It took no more than two seconds."
http://www.usatoday.com/news/sept11/2002-09-04-elevator-usat_x.htm
A full elevator had just left the 78th floor, and Carmen was about to carry up six or seven stragglers. The plane struck as the doors of her elevator closed. They could hear debris smash into the top of the car; then the elevator cracked open, and flames poured in. Carmen jammed her fingers between the closed doors, pulled them partly open and held them as passengers clambered over and under her 5-foot-6 frame to escape.
Before finally throwing herself out onto the lobby floor, she glanced back to be sure the elevator was empty. That was when fire scorched her face with second- and third-degree burns, and literally welded her hooped right earring to her neck. Her hands were badly burned.
http://www.usatoday.com/life/sept11/2002-09-10-surivivor-griffiths_x.htm