I'm not going around in circles with you.
Of course you're not. You're not moving at all.
This engineer clearly made his determination on something. It couldn't have been historic prescience, as it never happened before and there was no reason to think it would happen this time. What led him to make that determination?
What led him to that determination was extensive fire safety engineering knowledge applied to appreciation of the present circumstances, which included a large damaged steel skyscraper being on fire and the fire being un-fought from the start, which had never happened before that day, and had resulted in collapses both previous times it happened that day.
Being able to extrapolate unprecedented outcomes from unprecedented current conditions is admirable, but hardly superhuman. If Hoover Dam broke upstream of you, wouldn't you know enough to run away to higher ground, even though no dam of that type has ever broken before?
You'd think at the very least the public could know who he is, so he can be recognized for saving lives?
Oh, yeah, of course that's why you want to know his name, so you can honor him for his excellent and life-saving engineering work. Not so you can publicly accuse him of being complicit in mass murder, or make sure his name perpetually comes up associated with lunatic conspiracy theories in Google searches or anything like that.
Enough heroes died that day to make people who did their jobs well, and succeeded in preventing things from becoming even worse, reluctant to be regarded as heroes themselves. We can admire their competent actions without knowing their names, and the spiteful few with malevolent designs on them (however petty and feckless) can go to hell.
Respectfully,
Myriad
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