On September 11th three steel-superstructure high-rise buildings were completely destroyed (the first ever in the 100-year history of building skyscrapers). They fell symmetrically at--or for the Twin Towers, very nearly--freefall speed into thousands of tons of undamaged steel and concrete below the plane crash sites. Somehow the smaller/lighter tops of the Twin Towers (above the crash site) crushed the heavier/larger bottoms in violation of Newton's 3rd law of motion (...every action has an equal and opposite reaction...). Building Seven wasn't hit by a plane and still managed to destroy itself symmetrically and at full freefall. None of these observations are consistent with the characteristics of natural gravitational collapses. They are all characteristic of controlled demolitions.
Amen, Carolyn! It took me a couple of years to acknowledge what I knew intuitively on viewing the videos of the collapses on Sept. 11th. Ken Burns...this is not a set of observations I'd expect from him. That's as nicely as I know how to put it.
On September 11th three steel-superstructure high-rise buildings were completely destroyed (the first ever in the 100-year history of building skyscrapers). They fell symmetrically at--or for the Twin Towers, very nearly--freefall speed into thousands of tons of undamaged steel and concrete below the plane crash sites. Somehow the smaller/lighter tops of the Twin Towers (above the crash site) crushed the heavier/larger bottoms in violation of Newton's 3rd law of motion (...every action has an equal and opposite reaction...). Building Seven wasn't hit by a plane and still managed to destroy itself symmetrically and at full freefall. None of these observations are consistent with the characteristics of natural gravitational collapses. They are all characteristic of controlled demolitions.
Amen, Carolyn! It took me a couple of years to acknowledge what I knew intuitively on viewing the videos of the collapses on Sept. 11th. Ken Burns...this is not a set of observations I'd expect from him. That's as nicely as I know how to put it.