Welcome to the forum, Shoof!
I notice that you write up in the form of many questions issues that really are claims. For example, you write:
1) According to the NIST computer simulation of the WTC 7 demolition, global collapse could not manifest until raging fires had burned continuously for 4 hours. If, as the NIST report stated, there were only enough burnable materials to sustain a fire for 20-30 minutes in any given area, how is it that fires burned long enough to initiate demolition?
When really you are making a claim:
"According to the NIST computer simulation of the WTC 7 demolition, global collapse could not manifest until raging fires had burned continuously for 4 hours. Since, as the NIST report stated, there were only enough burnable materials to sustain a fire for 20-30 minutes in any given area, fires did not burn long enough to initiate demolition."
Another example, you wrote:
2) Regarding the thermal expansion that allegedly initiated the girder unseating from Column 79, did the NIST report exhibit scientific integrity by excluding thermal conductivity from their simulation?
But you are really masking a claim here:
"Regarding the thermal expansion that allegedly initiated the girder unseating from Column 79, the NIST report did not exhibit scientific integrity by excluding thermal conductivity from their simulation."
We could and shoukd do the same with all your questions: reformulate them as claims that you make.
The important difference is: By asking questions, you put the burden on us to disproof your claims, when really it would be your job to support your claims first.
So please, Shoof, could you rewrite your questions as claims, and then procede by supporting each claim with supporting citations (for example, where in the NIST reports did you read that "
global collapse could not manifest until raging fires had burned continuously for 4 hours")
and where did you read in the NIST report that "
there were only enough burnable materials to sustain a fire for 20-30 minutes in any given area". Having thus established that the
premises of your questions are supported by fact, you should then procede to explain why you think that 20-30 minutes sustained fire in any given area is not enough to initiate demoltion.
Having thusly made your claims clear and well supported, we can then discuss them thoroughly.
Further, since this will require a lot of work on your part as well as ours,I recommend that you don't seek to debate all your 13 "preliminary" issues "in no particular order" and all at once, but instead try to focus on one issue at a time. Maybe you should focus on the one claim that you personally find most damning for the "
US Government conspiracy theory".
You see, I presume you believe the "
US Government conspiracy theory" is all wrong and some theory of CD must be correct
because you believe that all your 13 claims are correct. I think that once you find in due order that your strongest claim is not in fact true, and then find that your second strongest claim is not in fact true, and then find that your third strongest claim is not in fact true, that we then don't need to g through the other ten and more claims.
May I ask what the source is for the list of claims you make? I believe that once you learn that the, say, three claims that you personally find most convincing are not in fact true, that you will then have learned that your source is not trustworthy. Hopefully, you will then abandon that source and its claims altoigether and see it as what it really is: A source of woo.