Dave Rogers
Bandaged ice that stampedes inexpensively through
With this ambiguous and cryptic quote, we have the implication that the lives of the firefighters were at least in part dependent on Silverstein's suggestion to pull "it". Do you not find it odd that a fire department commander would base his decision to "pull" on the recommendation of a building owner, rather than his own assessment of the safety of his men?
I don't for one minute imagine that was the case. However, I find it quite possible that a fire department commander, trying to explain to a very rich and powerful man that he is planning to let his building collapse, might be more than happy to allow said r.&p.m. to believe that he, not the fire department commander, was the one to suggest letting the building collapse. It's called customer relations. If the customer feels involved in your decisions, he's less likely to question them.
I know that if I were personally questioned as to my possible involvement in the murders of nearly three-thousand people, I would be screaming my innocence from rooftops, and making my comments that day crystal clear to anyone with questions.
No, you don't know any such thing. You just think that's what you'd do. If it actually happened, you might think the whole thing so ridiculous that you couldn't be bothered to reply to the groundless accusations of a bunch of lunatics. Or you might feel that a group of slanderous liars who had wilfully misinterpreted your words once should not be given the opportunity to wilfully misinterpret any further statements from you. Or you might find the whole affair so traumatic that you wanted to move on and have nothing more to do with it. Or any number of other perfectly good reasons.
Dave