Because I figured you might actually remember something that was discussed within the last 10 pages:
#1460
#1448
Or try all of the material spanned in the last 10 pages. It's been covered, many times in much better context than I can write it in. I suggest you reserve your copout remarks for a more fitting situation.
Well dynamic loads by definition are loads that change rapidly, this would also include any unusual loading conditions resulting from the rotation of say, the upper structure against the columns below it. You're claim seems obviously based on your thinking that there was no resistance or deceleration in the duration of the collapse, which would be wrong, and I picked out the total collapse time to demonstrate this to you. There was resistance, it was overcome before it had any seizable effect on the overall acceleration of the falling mass. Hand wave it away, but it doesn't change that your based assertion is wrong, and it subsequently affects the credibility of your remaining assertions since they ride on that concept.
Understanding the presence of a dynamic load and being able to calculate it are two different things. I'm not qualified to do calculations, but I do have an appreciation for the former at least.