Richard Gage Blueprint for Truth Rebuttals on YouTube by Chris Mohr

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Chris,

Thanks for your correction vis a vis John Gross.

As an aside, it is not clear from any of the videos that I've seen (including the firefighters & the "streams of molten steel, like lava" video) that the people on the video are relating first person observations.

It has been my experience that people who have seen something themselves are generally pretty clear on the issue. "I was here... I saw this..."

The firefighter specifically says "YOU'd get down below and YOU'd see molten steel, molten steel, running down the channel rails ..."

This phraseology does NOT prove that he is relating something second hand. But it is also not clear that he is relating something first hand either.

This same observation appears to apply to most (or all) of the videos that I've seen. And in several cases (Leslie Robertson, for example), when followed up, the quote turns out to be erroneous.


Oh, and just to be sure...

My understanding of the NIST graph in David Chandler's video is that the dots represent actual velocity measurements over time, and the straight line is put in to show that in Stage Two, the north perimeter wall fell at freefall within the margin of error. So the straight ascending line is a freefall "marker". But the dots above that straight ascending line show slightly faster than freefall, and the dots below slightly less than freefall. All are within the margin of error of their measurements, but the series of dots above the line COULD also show slightly faster than freefall.

If I am wrong in my reading of this please correct. I doubt I am. And Bill, freefall or slightly faster than freefall is no big deal in my leveraging explanation, but how could a building fall at slightly faster than freefall with CDs?

Yes, your interpretation is wrong.

The dots above the straight line velocity curve do NOT mean that the acceleration at that point is higher than g, or that dots below the curve are at a lower acceleration than g. You cannot tell anything about the acceleration by looking at any one velocity data point. You must look at at least 2 points.

The slope of the red line happens to be very close to G acceleration. It makes a handy reference.

What you have to look at is the SLOPE of the line that connects each pair of dots. If the slope between any two dots is steeper than the red line, then you can say is that "the data suggests that the average acceleration over this interval was higher than G". If the slope between any two dots is less steep than the red line, then the data suggests that the average acceleration over that interval was less than G."

There are two possible explanations for the value being above G:
1. Data error. (Note: ALL experimental data has error bands associated with it.)
2. The average acceleration really was >G over that interval.

It is not possible to tell from NIST or Chandler's data which of these conditions is true. More careful analysis (frame by frame, instead of every 15th or so frame) strongly suggests that the "over G" acceleration was true for two brief intervals, totaling about 1.2 seconds or so, during Stage II.

The explanation for this is simple. "G" acceleration is an upper limit for an "isolated body", i.e., a body that has only one force acting upon it - gravity. (That is, nothing else touching it.) If other forces are being applied to that body, then it's downward acceleration can be >G.

The external wall of WTC7 was absolutely NOT an "isolated body". It was unquestionably attached to lots of other components thru the floor trusses. According to NIST, those other components started falling earlier than the external wall gave way. It is entirely possible, even likely, that those components' earlier start transmitted additional downward forces on the outer walls which could appear as "over G" acceleration.

I hope this helps.


Tom

PS. BTW, I had a pretty good laugh listening to Chandler's comments about your video.

EVERY SINGLE comment he made about you being "unknowledgeable in physics" applies in spades to his being "unknowledgeable about engineering". He should listen to his own cautions about going public & issuing statements that are out of his realm of expertise.
 
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Watch the newest experiment from chemist kevin ryan how the production and ignition of nanothermite is performed.

ht tp://w ww.yout ube. com/watch?feature =player_embedded&v=O66UyGNrmSI
 
Watch the newest experiment from chemist kevin ryan how the production and ignition of nanothermite is performed.

ht tp://w ww.yout ube. com/watch?feature =player_embedded&v=O66UyGNrmSI


Did anyone say "nanothermite" didn't exist and couldn't be made?????

Multiple lies and distortions in the first few seconds! Fire could not be put out??? was it any harder to put out than any other deeply buried fires like those in coal waste heaps, landfills etc? and why would thermite which burns in seconds make any difference to that??? And Benthams is NOT a peer reviewed journal.

and at about 1:03 he makes the comment about the red chips that this too much energy for thermite but the right amount if it was a paint chip.....

note he adds organic binder.......

Would a tripod for the camera be asking too much?

what happened to where it supposedly formed a gel????? wher did all the liquid go? he just jumps to a dryed and crushed up powder. Sorry but he spent so much time showing mixing etc and just skips from where its a big volume of liquid to a crushed dry powder, we see no evidence of gel at all......I call BOOOOOGGGGGUUUUUSSSSS
Nice that he made the same mistake as Jones and set it off in a oxygen rich atmosphere. Was that so as not to further undermine the already much mocked jones et al "work"?

explosive effects??? and he is standing beside it and its in a glass beaker so obviously not very explosive!

a lid? lid made of what?

photos? what magnification??????

and they final pictures are NOT of what he has done just previous ones by Jones and another study (livermore?) which I suspect is also being misrepresented as evidence...........

now if he can just show how it could be used to cut thick steel columns without leaving any traces at all then he might be getting somewhere:D
 
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Did anyone say "nanothermite" didn't exist and couldn't be made?????

??The debunkers dont take it serious and dont look to the possbile option. Thats the big problem.


Multiple lies and distortions in the first few seconds! Fire could not be put out??? was it any harder to put out than any other deeply buried fires like those in coal waste heaps, landfills etc? and why would thermite which burns in seconds make any difference to that??? And Benthams is NOT a peer reviewed journal.

Fire could not put out, show me the evidence it could.

Dont ask about thermite or nano-thermite, if u dont have the knowledge about it.

Read and learn about bentham:

A major STM journal publisher of 106 online and print journals, 200 plus open access journals, and related print/online book series, Bentham Science answers the informational needs of the pharmaceutical, biomedical and medical research community.

Leading journals include Current Pharmaceutical Design (Impact Factor 4.774), Current Medicinal Chemistry (Impact Factor 4.63), the leading review journal in its field and endorsed by 7 Nobel Laureates. Other high profile journals include Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry (Impact Factor 4.112), Current Drug Metabolism (Impact Factor 3.896) and Current Drug Targets (Impact Factor 3.061), Current Molecular Medicine (Impact Factor 5.212), Current Cancer Drug Targets (Impact Factor 4.771).

NEW: Bentham Science Publishers are launching more than 200 peer-reviewed open access journals, under the banner of "BENTHAM OPEN". These free-to-view online journals cover all major disciplines of science, technology, and medicine, please click here


htt p: / /ww w.bent hamsci ence. c om/


and at about 1:03 he makes the comment about the red chips that this too much energy for thermite but the right amount if it was a paint chip.....

Nice that he made the same mistake as Jones and set it off in a oxygen rich atmosphere. Was that so as not to further undermine the already much mocked jones et al "work"?


now if he can just show how it could be used to cut thick steel columns without leaving any traces then he might be getting somewhere:D

Without leaving any traces? how do u mean that?
 
??The debunkers dont take it serious and dont look to the possbile option. Thats the big problem.





Fire could not put out, show me the evidence it could.

Dont ask about thermite or nano-thermite, if u dont have the knowledge about it.

Read and learn about bentham:

A major STM journal publisher of 106 online and print journals, 200 plus open access journals, and related print/online book series, Bentham Science answers the informational needs of the pharmaceutical, biomedical and medical research community.

Leading journals include Current Pharmaceutical Design (Impact Factor 4.774), Current Medicinal Chemistry (Impact Factor 4.63), the leading review journal in its field and endorsed by 7 Nobel Laureates. Other high profile journals include Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry (Impact Factor 4.112), Current Drug Metabolism (Impact Factor 3.896) and Current Drug Targets (Impact Factor 3.061), Current Molecular Medicine (Impact Factor 5.212), Current Cancer Drug Targets (Impact Factor 4.771).

NEW: Bentham Science Publishers are launching more than 200 peer-reviewed open access journals, under the banner of "BENTHAM OPEN". These free-to-view online journals cover all major disciplines of science, technology, and medicine, please click here


htt p: / /ww w.bent hamsci ence. c om/




Without leaving any traces? how do u mean that?

http://www.benthamscience.com/ Bentham website
 
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David Chandler catches a glaring error of mine when I accidentally said Stage 1 of the Building 7 collapse is at freefall. That was a simple misread of my text and I just didn't catch it so I will have to correct it.

A simple question tho: looking at the NIST graph, it looks to me like Stage Two had over a second where collapse speeds were either slightly faster than freefall or within the margin of error of freefall. As I said in my YouTube, my explanation accounts for either possibility.

Although I may not have used the exact right terminology, I do not believe I misinterpreted the graph in any significant way. I certainly didn't misunderstand it as deeply as he accused me of. Except for my obvious mistake re Stage 1 = freefall, was there anything about my explanation that is screamingly inaccurate as he claims?

Just what david chandler said, i think also it was a big mistake from richard gage to debate u.

Not that you are a bad guy or something. But its just because you dont have enough knowledge to talk about the subjects like physics.

If we would listen to u and not listen to the experts. Than we didnt need to go to a university to learn about physics.

It would be the best, if u should put some energy and time to search experts that can debate the experts, like david chandler, kevin ryan, niels harrit. etcetera.
 
Chris,

Thanks for your correction vis a vis John Gross.

As an aside, it is not clear from any of the videos that I've seen (including the firefighters & the "streams of molten steel, like lava" video) that the people on the video are relating first person observations.

It has been my experience that people who have seen something themselves are generally pretty clear on the issue. "I was here... I saw this..."

The firefighter specifically says "YOU'd get down below and YOU'd see molten steel, molten steel, running down the channel rails ..."

This phraseology does NOT prove that he is relating something second hand. But it is also not clear that he is relating something first hand either.

This same observation appears to apply to most (or all) of the videos that I've seen. And in several cases (Leslie Robertson, for example), when followed up, the quote turns out to be erroneous.




Yes, your interpretation is wrong.

The dots above the straight line velocity curve do NOT mean that the acceleration at that point is higher than g, or that dots below the curve are at a lower acceleration than g. You cannot tell anything about the acceleration by looking at any one velocity data point. You must look at at least 2 points.

The slope of the red line happens to be very close to G acceleration. It makes a handy reference.

What you have to look at is the SLOPE of the line that connects each pair of dots. If the slope between any two dots is steeper than the red line, then you can say is that "the data suggests that the average acceleration over this interval was higher than G". If the slope between any two dots is less steep than the red line, then the data suggests that the average acceleration over that interval was less than G."

There are two possible explanations for the value being above G:
1. Data error. (Note: ALL experimental data has error bands associated with it.)
2. The average acceleration really was >G over that interval.

It is not possible to tell from NIST or Chandler's data which of these conditions is true. More careful analysis (frame by frame, instead of every 15th or so frame) strongly suggests that the "over G" acceleration was true for two brief intervals, totaling about 1.2 seconds or so, during Stage II.

The explanation for this is simple. "G" acceleration is an upper limit for an "isolated body", i.e., a body that has only one force acting upon it - gravity. (That is, nothing else touching it.) If other forces are being applied to that body, then it's downward acceleration can be >G.

The external wall of WTC7 was absolutely NOT an "isolated body". It was unquestionably attached to lots of other components thru the floor trusses. According to NIST, those other components started falling earlier than the external wall gave way. It is entirely possible, even likely, that those components' earlier start transmitted additional downward forces on the outer walls which could appear as "over G" acceleration.

I hope this helps.


Tom

PS. BTW, I had a pretty good laugh listening to Chandler's comments about your video.

EVERY SINGLE comment he made about you being "unknowledgeable in physics" applies in spades to his being "unknowledgeable about engineering". He should listen to his own cautions about going public & issuing statements that are out of his realm of expertise.
Thanks Tom,

For video 18 (freefall of building 7), obviously I can easily correct the "Stage One" blooper of my fatigued voice in this video. I understand better the faster-than-freefall possibility with your explanation (thank you, very clear). But since the faster than freefall aspect of my argument is so much less important than the explanation of net-zero resistance from the three forces of gravity, residual resistance and leveraging, I'm not sure it's worth going back and patching this up further... it would look very clumsy.

No one seems to be bothered by the other things David Chandler said against me. His sole argument is look, he can't even read the NIST collapse graph, therefore you don't have to listen to anything he says. I know I understand the basics of that graph and it looks to me like I may have occasionally not used correct scientific terminology but I am nowhere near the ignoramus Chandler claims I am. Besides my obvious "Phase One" blooper and the misunderstanding of the dots Tom just pointed out here, I just don't believe my explanation was riddled with errors! Even with Tom's correction, the end result is that we see a perimeter wall in freefall or maybe slightly faster than freefall for around a second just like I said in my video. Anyone else have thoughts on this?
 
Chris,

Thanks for your correction vis a vis John Gross.

As an aside, it is not clear from any of the videos that I've seen (including the firefighters & the "streams of molten steel, like lava" video) that the people on the video are relating first person observations.

It has been my experience that people who have seen something themselves are generally pretty clear on the issue. "I was here... I saw this..."

The firefighter specifically says "YOU'd get down below and YOU'd see molten steel, molten steel, running down the channel rails ..."

This phraseology does NOT prove that he is relating something second hand. But it is also not clear that he is relating something first hand either.

This same observation appears to apply to most (or all) of the videos that I've seen. And in several cases (Leslie Robertson, for example), when followed up, the quote turns out to be erroneous.




Yes, your interpretation is wrong.

The dots above the straight line velocity curve do NOT mean that the acceleration at that point is higher than g, or that dots below the curve are at a lower acceleration than g. You cannot tell anything about the acceleration by looking at any one velocity data point. You must look at at least 2 points.

The slope of the red line happens to be very close to G acceleration. It makes a handy reference.

What you have to look at is the SLOPE of the line that connects each pair of dots. If the slope between any two dots is steeper than the red line, then you can say is that "the data suggests that the average acceleration over this interval was higher than G". If the slope between any two dots is less steep than the red line, then the data suggests that the average acceleration over that interval was less than G."

There are two possible explanations for the value being above G:
1. Data error. (Note: ALL experimental data has error bands associated with it.)
2. The average acceleration really was >G over that interval.

It is not possible to tell from NIST or Chandler's data which of these conditions is true. More careful analysis (frame by frame, instead of every 15th or so frame) strongly suggests that the "over G" acceleration was true for two brief intervals, totaling about 1.2 seconds or so, during Stage II.

The explanation for this is simple. "G" acceleration is an upper limit for an "isolated body", i.e., a body that has only one force acting upon it - gravity. (That is, nothing else touching it.) If other forces are being applied to that body, then it's downward acceleration can be >G.

The external wall of WTC7 was absolutely NOT an "isolated body". It was unquestionably attached to lots of other components thru the floor trusses. According to NIST, those other components started falling earlier than the external wall gave way. It is entirely possible, even likely, that those components' earlier start transmitted additional downward forces on the outer walls which could appear as "over G" acceleration.

I hope this helps.


Tom

PS. BTW, I had a pretty good laugh listening to Chandler's comments about your video.

EVERY SINGLE comment he made about you being "unknowledgeable in physics" applies in spades to his being "unknowledgeable about engineering". He should listen to his own cautions about going public & issuing statements that are out of his realm of expertise.
Thanks Tom,

For video 18 (freefall of building 7), obviously I can easily correct the "Stage One" blooper of my fatigued voice in this video. I understand better the faster-than-freefall possibility with your explanation (thank you, very clear). But since the faster than freefall aspect of my argument is so much less important than the explanation of net-zero resistance from the three forces of gravity, residual resistance and leveraging, I'm not sure it's worth going back and patching this up further... it would look very clumsy.

No one seems to be bothered by the other things David Chandler said against me. His sole argument is look, he can't even read the NIST collapse graph, therefore you don't have to listen to anything he says. I know I understand the basics of that graph and it looks to me like I may have occasionally not used correct scientific terminology but I am nowhere near the ignoramus Chandler claims I am. Besides my obvious "Phase One" blooper and the misunderstanding of the dots Tom just pointed out here, I just don't believe my explanation was riddled with errors! Even with Tom's correction, the end result is that we see a perimeter wall in freefall or maybe slightly faster than freefall for around a second just like I said in my video. Anyone else have thoughts on this?
 
Read and learn about bentham:

A major STM journal publisher of 106 online and print journals, 200 plus open access journals, and related print/online book series, Bentham Science answers the informational needs of the pharmaceutical, biomedical and medical research community.

Leading journals include Current Pharmaceutical Design (Impact Factor 4.774), Current Medicinal Chemistry (Impact Factor 4.63), the leading review journal in its field and endorsed by 7 Nobel Laureates. Other high profile journals include Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry (Impact Factor 4.112), Current Drug Metabolism (Impact Factor 3.896) and Current Drug Targets (Impact Factor 3.061), Current Molecular Medicine (Impact Factor 5.212), Current Cancer Drug Targets (Impact Factor 4.771).

NEW: Bentham Science Publishers are launching more than 200 peer-reviewed open access journals, under the banner of "BENTHAM OPEN". These free-to-view online journals cover all major disciplines of science, technology, and medicine, please click here


http://www.benthamscience.com/

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?t=141353
A peer review publication that apparently does badly in it's... peer review process, which prompted a number of editors to resign. As I recall, one such incident involved their accepting a phony paper. Yeah, we know already, they're not very good at what they do.
 
Thanks Tom,

For video 18 (freefall of building 7), obviously I can easily correct the "Stage One" blooper of my fatigued voice in this video. I understand better the faster-than-freefall possibility with your explanation (thank you, very clear). But since the faster than freefall aspect of my argument is so much less important than the explanation of net-zero resistance from the three forces of gravity, residual resistance and leveraging, I'm not sure it's worth going back and patching this up further... it would look very clumsy.

No one seems to be bothered by the other things David Chandler said against me. His sole argument is look, he can't even read the NIST collapse graph, therefore you don't have to listen to anything he says. I know I understand the basics of that graph and it looks to me like I may have occasionally not used correct scientific terminology but I am nowhere near the ignoramus Chandler claims I am. Besides my obvious "Phase One" blooper and the misunderstanding of the dots Tom just pointed out here, I just don't believe my explanation was riddled with errors! Even with Tom's correction, the end result is that we see a perimeter wall in freefall or maybe slightly faster than freefall for around a second just like I said in my video. Anyone else have thoughts on this?

I used to refer to NIST's three stages as plummet,plunge,GONE. Can you describe your sequence in the same kind of way Like fall,accelerate,collapse or something like that ?
 
=Marokkaan;7431483]??The debunkers dont take it serious and dont look to the possbile option. Thats the big problem.

we don't take attack by godzilla seriously either because it simply makes no sense to do so.


Fire could not put out, show me the evidence it could.

its out now:D seriously though, fires like this are ALWAYS hard and sometimes impossible to put out because the actual fire heats up the material around it and the water turns to steam before it ever gets to the flames. The pile slows water entry and it cannot get to the rate required to cool down the material so the fire keeps burning. Sometimes for years.

why is this relevant. Thermite burns up in seconds.....not weeks. what mechanism are you suggesting is at work that would make thermite a reason for the fire not being able to be put out????:confused::confused::confused:

Don't ask about thermite or nano-thermite, if u dont have the knowledge about it.

What was I asking about thermite??? I am fully aware of how it works.

Read and learn about bentham:

I did:Dhttp://informsciencenetwork.com/sciences/spoof-paper-accepted-journal-2360111a



Without leaving any traces? how do u mean that?

cut columns, trigger mechanisms, previously melted steel, no credible way to add it to the building, no demonstrated way to cut columns without large enclosures and large quantities thermite.
 
[]
A peer review publication that apparently does badly in it's... peer review process, which prompted a number of editors to resign. As I recall, one such incident involved their [/"]accepting a phony paper[/URL]. Yeah, we know already, they're not very good at what they do.

One incident, so what. The article about nano-thermite is peer reviewed.

You dont understand the meaning of peer-review?

Is there any peer-reviewed article that refutes the nano-thermite peer reviewed article?
 
Just what david chandler said, i think also it was a big mistake from richard gage to debate u.

Not that you are a bad guy or something. But its just because you dont have enough knowledge to talk about the subjects like physics.

If we would listen to u and not listen to the experts. Than we didnt need to go to a university to learn about physics.

It would be the best, if u should put some energy and time to search experts that can debate the experts, like david chandler, kevin ryan, niels harrit. etcetera.

With all due respect Chandler is only a high school physics teacher. A job I could easy get but since it pays only half what I earn.....
he has been shown before to have been just plain wrong in much, if not all his work on 911 to date, and if he was my kids teacher I'd have him moved out of his class. Simply put...he is incompetent.
 
we don't take attack by godzilla seriously either because it simply makes no sense to do so.

Thats the problem. U see it as fantasy, while experts are seeing it as an eye-opener.

Your opinion doesnt bother me. What bothers me is science


its out now:D seriously though, fires like this are ALWAYS hard and sometimes impossible to put out because the actual fire heats up the material around it and the water turns to steam before it ever gets to the flames. The pile slows water entry and it cannot get to the rate required to cool down the material so the fire keeps burning. Sometimes for years.
why is this relevant. Thermite burns up in seconds.....not weeks. what mechanism are you suggesting is at work that would make thermite a reason for the fire not being able to be put out????:confused::confused::confused:

Show me some proof please.

.




Strong argument.....










cut columns, trigger mechanisms, previously melted steel, no credible way to add it to the building, no demonstrated way to cut columns without large enclosures and large quantities thermite
Well, here you have an eyeopener.

I dont have 15 post, so i have to use spaces.

Watch and learn

http : // www . you tube . com/ watch?v=5d5iIoCiI8g
 
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One incident, so what. The article about nano-thermite is peer reviewed.

You dont understand the meaning of peer-review?

I do, bentham did not and did not care either.

Is there any peer-reviewed article that refutes the nano-thermite peer reviewed article?[/QUOTE]

That not how science works.....scientists have better things to do than refute non papers, non peer reviewed in non journals.:rolleyes:
 
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