I think this is a better question;
Do you think you could be possibly wrong about your apparent belief that Mr. Jennings did not see the WTC twin towers standing after the 6th floor explosion?
If you do not believe you could be possibly wrong, than you have chosen to allow your beliefs to override what an eyewitness claims to have observed.
Just as I corrected my timeline belief when presented with solid photographic evidence by Norseman, if you can demonstrate proof of equal certainty, that at the time when Mr. Jennings arrived at the 8th floor, the WTC twin towers could not have been standing, I will admit I was wrong to believe in what Mr. Jennings claimed.
You have been supplied with the statements of several others in WTC7 who's recounting of events would have to be wrong for Jennings to be correct. Thus the preponderance of evidence is against Jennings having seen both towers standing when he was on the eighth floor.
Not only would it be extremely unlikely that the floor lighting for floors 6 and floor 8 would be handled by a single circuit breaker, I am sure it would be a serious code violation. In a building with floors the size of a football field, it would require a breaker with an unimaginably high amperage rating.
All circuits have current protection devices no matter the current. If you walk out your front door you might see them attached to the lines that supply your street. You are correct though, high amperage lines may well have fuses rather than breakers. Not a particularly important distinction though.
You have made a lot of absurd statements jaydee but that one ranks high in the list.
With that kind of blind response to the serious events inside 7 WTC, that Mr. Jennings described, it is no wonder you understand so little of what really happened on 9/11.
The 23rd floor was not the whole building.
The name of the office was the "Office of Emergency Management". Rather suggests that in time of emergency, it would be the last office manned in the building. If its been ordered evacuated then something very serious is threatening that particular building and its pretty obvious that if that office is evacuated then the rest of the offices are too. Its really a no-brainer, or so I thought. You seem to personally indicate I was wrong on that.
So, Jennings and Hess are ordered out, its a fairly easy bet that if the OEM has been abandoned then the entire building has been evacuated. They take to the stairs. You say Jennings is so concerned that he is running down them. Then they experience the building shake for 5-10 seconds while the lights go out and the stairs fill with choking dust and they grope their way to the eighth floor. Despite the fact that they were bent on getting out and have now just escaped a terrifying event only two floors below them, they wander about the eighth floor apparently no longer feeling the urgency to get out. At least not enough so to overcome a societal no-no about breaking windows.
Now according to you the window was broken ( and I use the singular since I believe that his use of the plural refers to the fact that the window is double or triple pane) at the very earliest, between collapses, possibly after both collapses. In the former case one would expect a similar experience as Catalano had a few floors below. Maybe less dust if the windows didn't break. You complain that J and H don't
notice comment on the building shaking like Catalano did. Four some reason though your complaint only applies to them 15 floors above where they were, according to you, during that time.
If the NE window was broken after the collapse of WTC1 then they did experience a large number, if not all, of the south face windows breaking and an even greater shaking of the building as columns, some at the eighth floor level, being violently ripped away, and an even greater amount of choking dust and an enveloping darkness. Yet again, despite the fact that you complain that while on the 23rd floor Jennings and Hess make no comment about the building shaking, here they most definitely would have ( assuming it occurs while they are on the eighth floor) experienced the most terrifying experience of all and say not a word about it other than, at least in your supposition, that they "heard" continuing explosions.
It stretches the imagination to the point of ridiculousness, MM.
Again, as an administrator, who had no idea of the serious situation outside of 7 WTC, much of Mr. Jennings behaviour when he arrived at the 8th floor was not too surprising.
I'll give you that. Jennings apparently was taking this a lot more seriously than he was on the ride up in the elevator. How much time passed between the ride up and the decision that elevators were not to be trusted any more?
Aside from asking Mr. Hess to test the phones, I have no idea how the two men spent the minimum 30 minutes before Mr. Jennings smashed windows and saw the results of the WTC twin tower collapses
I know you have no answer for why the immediacy of getting out of the building became less urgent after they experienced darkness, a shaking skyscraper and choking dust. That's because such a reaction doesn't make any sense and therefore logic dictates that the urgency was not lessened and that the window was broken very soon after they reached the eighth floor.
Following the lights going out, the explosions, the smoke, and the increasing heat, no doubt Mr. Jennings lost any inhibitions about smashing windows
.
The first of these events, according to Jennings and you, ( and the only timebitvrayed much comment) occurred at the sixth floor landing. Like I said " #### it, I'm breaking a window and calling for assistance in getting my carcass out of the building asap!" But I'm not a fearless administrator.
What I believe is that Mr. Jennings sincerely believed he saw both the WTC twin towers still standing after he experienced that explosion at the 6th floor stairwell landing.
He may well have believed in fairies and Narnia. We are not debating what he believed. We are debating what was. OTOH we know he experienced this skyscraper shaking, according to Hess it did so for several seconds. We know they experienced choking dust and the lights going out. We know it "was" hot. All of these occurred in a building which they were told to leave, from an empty office that is manned, normally, in times of emergency ( the very reason they were called out of their daily jobs), and came upon no one else while going down fifteen flights. Even if Jennings looked and believed he saw both towers standing, that would in no way at all reduce the urgency of getting out of the building he was in.
That's more of why you cannot come up with any reason for laying about for thirty minutes before overcoming a taboo about breaking windows and calling for assistance.
Until he was rescued a few hours later, Mr. Jenning's only news from outside of 7 WTC was that scrap of misinformation he received in the original phone call.
So what? How does that overcome a sense of urgency to get out of a building that has been evacuated and in which they have experienced loss of power, choking dust, and a horrific shaking lasting several seconds, not once, not twice, but by your timeline they would have had happen three times? What's happening outside is concerning perhaps but it takes a backseat to what's happening
to them!