I hate to keep arguing with an ally, but yes John Gross at NIST was asked about molten steel, and yes there were eyewitnesses who said they saw molten steel. We believe they were mistaken, but they did say that, and John Gross denied that anyone said it. My bigger point was to acknowledge that eyewitnesses said this about molten steel, and not to just blow off this claim but to investigate it seriously. It wasn't mainly about dissing John Gross.
The questioner told him that there were "huge pools of molten steel" and that explosives should have been considered to explain these "huge pools of molten steel."
I think Gross was being intentionally obtuse because he was being spoken to by such a ignorant conspiracy theorist he didn't have time for. Yes he should have given a better answer but maybe if the question was phrased different he would would have, but we'll never know now.
Was it a good response? No, but the most you can glean from it is that he says he knows of no one reporting molten steel, still wrong, but it says nothing about molten metal. It says nothing about whether he acknowledges other melted metals in the debris.
I think the best thing to do is acknowledge that these eyewitness statements are on record, so people don't continue to feel discounted, ignored and denied. Then we can look more deeply together at the question of molten steel or iron.
Sure, I just don't like this leap from someone denying molten
steel to them denying molten
metal. That is not the question he was asked and that is not what he answered.
And as I said I think you missed a good opportunity to point out that the reports of molten metal and molten steel and entirely expected since we can see other fires in news reports with quotes from people that talk about this in the
exact same way. To me thats a pretty big kick in the teeth since their entire argument is that these reports om 911 are strange and shouldn't be there in the first place since "fire can't melt steel", as they say. If you show that actually 911 was nowhere near the first time people have reported these things, in this way, in a fire, then it negates their entire argument.
That was the
entire reason Jones had a basis to claim thermate/thermite was involved and where the red chip saga flows from. If it can be shown other fires contain these reports as well and obviously thermite hasn't been used there, then his argument was built on nothing to start with.