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Originally posted by Griff
Sorry WhiteRabit that this is getting way off base. I have found a few things.
Originally posted by Griff
Anyway, are they all architectural?
Originally posted by shrunkensimon
After considering the various theories of the demolition (i fully believe it was demolished), the only one which can account for all the evidence seen is the theory of using a small hydrogen bomb in the basement.
Originally posted by Pootie
Since TWO FEMA photographers were the only people allowed to photograph and all other cameras were confiscated at military checkpoints entering the restricted zone, I think you know this will be difficult/impossible.
Needle in a haystack...
Originally posted by Pootie
Which leaves us with:
A. Fusion devices that little is known about. (I will concede the raised tritium levels could point to this.)
B. A military explosive we are unaware of.
Am I missing something?
Originally posted by Tom Bedlam
Tough to explain the lack of neutron-activation of the rubble.
Or the lack of dead people everywhere in the area from neutron irradiation.
Originally posted by bsbray11
Can you back this up or are you just assuming because you don't know of any? Not knowing of any is not the same as positively knowing that there weren't any, just as you assumed there was no activated steel because you hadn't looked for any.
Originally posted by Tom Bedlam
This is logically equivalent to trying to prove a negative
The energy output of deuterium-tritium fusion is primarily in neutrons. The neutron flux of even a small weapon would have been devastating. To try to claim it would leave no activated material is an indication that you don't understand how fusion works.
Further, the "micro-fusion weapons" you guys talk about require antimatter
When the "micro nuke" went off, you'd have high-flux activation of the surrounding building materials. This produces long half-life isotopes. It is the same mechanism that produces fallout in conventional nukes. You'd also have lower-flux activation of materials in the surrounding buildings, and a lot of people dead of neutron radiation.
If you can stroll around the area without a Geiger counter going nuts, it wasn't a nuke of any sort.
Originally posted by bsbray11
Originally posted by Tom Bedlam
This is logically equivalent to trying to prove a negative
Ah, you don't know that. You're blowing smoke up my ass.
A nuclear reaction will not instantly vaporize anyone around
I didn't claim it didn't leave activated material. I asked you what that picture was. Are you going to answer me?
Says you.
Generally, it only requires something to initiate fusion besides fission. That can be anti-matter, that can be "red mercury", that can be some other source of intense X-rays or any number of things that you don't have authority to speculate on. All that needs to exist is enormous pressure. I very seriously doubt there are only two possible ways to go about achieving it.
All are fine with me except the radius of damage. You are assuming sizes that I'm not so sure are necessary.
I don't suppose you count massive radiation at the landfill where the debris was hauled, and elevated radiation in that area in general? Heard of this? Rather recent news. And the clean-up site was very strictly controlled for a good length of time. If any Geiger readings were done they were not made public, as far as I know, just as they had local seismographs in Manhattan, and those records are also not in public domain. So it's something I don't think you can really comment on either way, except to speculate that you think or you don't think.
Originally posted by bsbray11
Originally posted by Tom Bedlam
[edit on 27-3-2007 by bsbray11]
what caused these Iron I-Beams to be red hot like this for 6 weeks?
I'll bet it was some kind of chemical, like.........
I know THERMITE
[edit on 27-3-2007 by PHARAOH1133]
Originally posted by Tom Bedlam
Your statement, verbatim: "Not knowing of any is not the same as positively knowing that there weren't any."
The only way to positively know that there weren't ANY is to examine every last bit of material.
However, like I said, you wouldn't have to, because it would be obvious.
However, a few kiloGrays of neutrons will kill them deader than Dick's hatband, so you'd be seeing bodies everywhere.
I didn't claim it didn't leave activated material. I asked you what that picture was. Are you going to answer me?
It's a picture of the building collapsing. Now, show me the evidence of neutron activation of the material.
If you're invoking "red mercury", and you don't understand about the results of neutron flux, you aren't ready to discuss my authority to speculate on the matter.
The bulk of any DT reaction's energy is in neutrons. If it went off at all, there would have been enough to scatter activated material all over Manhattan in the smoke plume. Detection of it would be trivial. Not to mention the dead bystanders.
Unexpected Radiation 'Hot Spots' Found In NYC
Anti-terrorism officials conducted a helicopter survey of New York City's radiation sources in preparation for a so-called "dirty bomb" attack -- and discovered a Staten Island park with dangerously high levels of radium, a new report found.
Federal authorities found 80 unexpected "hot spots" around New York City, according to the Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress.
Originally posted by bsbray11
My point was that you are asserting something that you do not know to be true. I'm not recommending you try to figure out if it's really true or not, or any method for doing that. I'm only suggesting you not make assumptions like that unless you have some reason to, at least some testimony or source or something, besides that you haven't heard the opposite. I haven't heard that there aren't people on the dark side of the Moon, but I'm not about to tell you that therefore there are.
How would it be obvious that there are not vaporized people? Especially considering that there WERE vaporized people, about 1000 of them.
So there were no dead bodies in the aftermaths of the collapses? Or are you saying that EVERYONE should have died? Again, this goes back to the yield of the devices. I actually doubt anyone would have immediately died far enough away to not be also pummeled by debris.
Obviously those are rhetorical questions. In other words, you are seeing neutron activation in those pictures, not just "a picture of the building collapsing". We can play immature word games like that all day, man, but I'm not going to. You can either address those images or you can drop the point altogether, because there's no use having a discussion with you if you're not even going to be open to what I'm showing you.
What besides Los Alamos' word do you have against red mercury? I don't really care what the mechanism is. All I'm saying is that you aren't going to tell me what the mechanism was, and then tell me it's impossible. That's setting up your own pins to knock down and like I said, I very seriously doubt there are only two ways of achieving nuclear fusion.
Again, size. Obviously there is a boundary on any type of nuclear weapon, and it won't just affect things as far as YOU see fit, and then its effects magically stop. The affected area is dependent upon the yield! I'm not even saying there wasn't radiation, I'm saying by the time that it mattered, it had already spread, and the debris was already being hauled out, and to this day there IS elevated radiation in the area.
-- and discovered a Staten Island park with dangerously high levels of radium, a new report found.
-- found 80 unexpected "hot spots" around New York City
The park that was closed was about 10 miles SW of Ground Zero, across the Lower New York Bay.
This is what you were asking for. Will you concede that I've provided what you asked for? You don't have to agree that a nuke was used, only that the above, even if coincidental, does show dangerous amounts of radiation right down-wind of Ground Zero.