I have never suggested that the oft quoted value is a the same type of estimate as mine.
Then why are you comparing your answer to it?
I have said it is not correct with respect to the actual weight of the building (at any point in time may I add). It would require an average load of 100% of design SDL and LL which we all know is very unlikely.

That is because it represents D + Lr*LL. That should be a value far on the right side of the bell curve. That is never intended to be "actual weight of the building" - it is the design load on the foundation which we can be 99% sure will not be exceeded. It is quite accurately described as the design gravity loads at the base of the tower.
Remember that the 500,000 tons value is given as fact just about everywhere as "the building weighed 500,000 tons" with nothing about how it is calculated. These types of unqualified statements are misleading and furthermore cannot be correct.
Where? Wikipedia? PBS? Perhaps this should be a lesson to twoofers to stop doing their research at websites; there is a world of technical publications, journals, presentations, books, conferences, etc. that offer much more information.
Also, I have been misquoted at times, or had a story published in a newspaper that is not quite technically accurate (usually because the reporter is not an engineer). No editor in his right mind is going to stop a story to point out this is dead load, this is live load, this is live load reduction factor, etc etc. Robert Fowler was presenting his comments to an audience of MIT engineers, and he presented the gravity load magnitudes along with the wind base shear magnitudes. An audience of engineers does not need to be spoonfed that these numbers are not everyday values, but instead represent design maxima. The reporter put weight in parentheses after gravity loads.
I will try to get in touch with the engineers. I never assumed they would be willing or have time to discuss this. I will also check with the architectural sites regarding their estimates of similar buildings (i.e. what type of calc).
I do not know whether the engineers will be willing to discuss this with you. That depends on you. If you are truly interested in “truth”, in learning and in educating yourself, I am confident they will be happy to answer your questions. If however, like many twoofers, you are only interested in arguing or stubbornly refusing to listen to people more experienced and knowledgeable than yourself, then I would not expect them to humor you for long. There is nothing more mind boggling than some arrogant twoofer out of his depth arguing with an expert in his field.
I hope you note how few engineers there are in the “twoof” movement. Quick questions about the “twoof” movement:
How many structural engineers are there?
How many structural engineers who design office buildings?
How many structural engineers who have designed buildings over four stories?
How many structural engineers who have designed buildings over twenty stories?
How many structural engineers who have designed skyscrapers?
Why do you think this is?
I personally believe the lack of engineers (of most stripes) within the twoofy movement is attributable to the engineers code of ethics (which most engineers understand and practice). It states (among other things) that engineers will confine their practice to areas of competence, will issue public statements only in an objective or truthful manner, and will not attempt to injure, maliciously or falsely, directly or indirectly, the professional reputation of other engineers.
Critique whichever Bazant article you want. I have the correct versions, and if your critique refers to something not in the article I will let you know. (BTW, I would read your Bazant article a lot closer. His mass value is only 50% higher than yours, not 3 times, and he openly admits he was freeballing it - because he wasn't writing a paper picking nits over the "actual weight", he was demonstrating that the order of magnitude of the dynamic overload was so great that collapse was inevitable REGARDLESS of whether his weight was off by a factor of 2 or even 4...)