From the Skeptic.com exchange, my final words on Jeremy Hammond's blog:
Jeremy wrote: "Chris, if you knew the difference, at the time your wrote the article, between a steel-framed building and a reinforced concrete building, then you were not guilty of mere ignorance, but of being willfully dishonest with your readers."
Dear Jeremy,
My Buddhist friends talk a lot about "assuming good intent" when facing disagreements. In that spirit, I submit to you that:
1) I have a good layman's understanding of the issues I am talking about, and I run the things I say by scientists and engineers.
2) I am honest.
3) I sometimes make mistakes.
In the case of the Delft collapse, yes I knew it was steel-reinforced concrete, but having seen on 9/11 Truth videos several examples of steel-reinforced concrete buildings or cores not collapsing in fires, I thought such buildings were acceptable to use as examples, and my mistakenly calling Delft a steel building or even a steel-framed building did not change the fact that all buildings, regardless of materials, can collapse in a fire.
In preparing for my March 6 debate with Richard Gage, I asked him what he thought were the most compelling reasons to believe in controlled demolition. I warned him that I would look at his best evidence, and it could even change my mind, in which case I would have to call off the debate. We directly debated his strongest arguments. Neither Richard nor I ever once accused the other of being ignorant or a liar or insane. You and some others in the 9/11 Truth movement have chosen to attack me by saying I am either incredibly ignorant or a liar. As you praise David Chandler's notorious "pearls before swine" video attack on me, you too grossly magnify my errors and look for evidence that I am willfully dishonest, assuming ill intent, and thereby encouraging the people who admire your work to dismiss out of hand what I am saying. I notice that the more people attack me personally, the less they tend to look at what I am actually saying.
The people who are qualified to say I am ignorant and unable to understand the issues I am debating are the scientists and engineers who accept the "natural collapse" theory and who know way more than either of us. They universally support my efforts to debate this issue from a layman/journalist's perspective and say I am interpreting their explanations well (and that I make mistakes sometimes).
I wish you well in your quest for the truth, and I may yet change my mind if new evidence (such as independent proof of thermitics in the dust) presents itself to me. But now it is time we part ways. While I always welcome corrections even from 9/11 Truth people, I am not willing to allow the debate to descend to me defending against charges of utter ignorance and willful dishonesty.
In the meantime know I share with you a desire for a world guided by peace, justice and truth.