lexicon008
Thinker
- Joined
- Apr 24, 2012
- Messages
- 241
You're setting a pretty high bar there my friend. Certainly no one predicted how fast the building would fall, how big the plume would be, etc. However... Going from memory, I do recall that the guys in the police helicopters reported an imminent collapse as they saw what was happening at the top of one of the Towers. Then there was the engineer who predicted the eventual collapse of Building 7 about 5 hours before it happened (said it would take about 5 hours). Then there was the fire chief who ordered the firefighters to evacuate the towers because it was looking unsound (falling plaster etc). And there was also the firemana who talkeed to BBC and said look at Building 7, how it's leaning, it ain't gonna last. And Chief Nigro who decided Building 7 was unstable and told firefighters to pull back to prevenmt further loss of life. These are just off the top of my head.
However, I think there is some truth to the claim that many engineers etc were pretty flummoxed by the whole thing. It had never happened before and, going from memory again, some experts did say they didn't understand how it all happened.
This i think is the issue at hand for most people who question the official story. Was there going to be a collapse..partial?..sure..were people expecting or could it have been expected that a total collapse would occur...how could they? There was no example of a non demolition complete collapse of a steel framed high rise structure prior to 911. Had they expected it to collapse..if it was truly inevitable from the time the impacts happened..then no command structure would knowingly put their command post right inside ground zero. That would be foolish and quite frankly negligent. They got caught completely off guard or weren't told that "Hey you might wanna get out of the building cuz, well, it's comin down"
Were they seriously concerned after the first tower came down..I don't doubt it. Should they have been concerned after the second..damn straight. But saying 7 was inevitable just because they pulled back, easy to say after the fact. Bazant took a rather large risk in publishing a paper 2 days post 911 when there wasn't even the beginnings of an investigation. He would have looked quite the fool if there had been foul play (above and beyond the planes obviously).