Originally posted by Pootie
I seem to be missing the point of this.
Based on information provided by a former Japanese bank employee, who said that the 81st floor of the South Tower was filled with server-size
Uninterrupted Power Supply (UPS) batteries, Bollyn has suggested
www.bollyn.com...
www.iamthewitness.com...
that the cells were filled with thermate. This was the floor that Flight 175 (or its surrogate) hit, so the fires could easily have melted the lead
and released the thermate, which then reacted with surrounding steel, causing it to melt. But how could this be effective in severely weakening many
girders far from the impact zone if all the thermate had been contained on
one floor? To facilitate the near free-fall collapse of
many
floors (and remember: destruction of floors started well
above the plane impact point in the South Tower), thermate had to be distributed on
many other floors as well, if, indeed it was ever used at all (see my thread here for my rebuttal of Jones' claim that it was). But the thermate
powder could never have reached many other floors if it was all sitting on the 81st floor, even allowing for some scattering by the impact of the
plane and resulting fires. So what was the point of it being kept on one floor?! Bollyn's suggestion makes sense of molten iron pouring out of the
81st floor - the floor where the batteries were housed. But why the plotters would load only
one floor with thermate does not make sense, as it
would not have helped very much in weakening other floors and thus the complete
collapse of the tower! On the other hand, if we suppose that
thermate
was planted in many parts of the skyscraper in order to help destruction of the
whole tower, what was the point of having so
much of it on one floor, hidden in batteries?! Bollyn's theory does not add up.
Bollyn's suggestion that there was thermate loaded in the North Tower that accounts for the white smoke (aluminium oxide, so Jones speculates) coming
from the explosion out of the east side equally does not make sense. Why bother to have so much thermate on one floor (the 95th), much of which was
scattered outside the building after the explosion if Bollyn's and Jones' interpretation of the white smoke as the aluminium oxide in thermate is to
be believed, when it would have been more sensible to have thermate distributed over many floors, so that it could melt steel girders in them and
facilitate near free-fall of
all the floors? Indeed, the tower could never have collapsed
completely if all the thermate had been loaded
on just one floor. How could what was left inside the tower after the impact get distributed to all the dozens of floors below the impact point?!
Anyway, there is really not all that much difference in lightness of color between the smoke from the north face of the North Tower and that issuing
from the east side - see photo at
www.iamthewitness.com...
The claim that the white smoke had to be the aluminium oxide in thermate is weak. Even if the difference of colour be accepted as real and not merely
due to the differences in density of the smoke or how sunlight was being scattered, it could merely reflect the difference between oxygen-starved,
weak fire, which generates black smoke, and a much hotter fire in a different area of the tower, which was creating white smoke. It does not
necessarily indicate that thermate was burning! Anyway, if it
had been, why did no molten metal pour out of the North Tower at the plane impact
level, as it did in the South Tower?
The same applies to the South Tower. Bollyn notices that the smoke issuing from the south side (impact face) is white, whereas the fireball issuing
from the south-east face is much darker. He fails to understand that comparatively little jet fuel exploded outside the impact area (most was carried
inside), so the smoke and concrete dust issuing from the hole was not darkened by the soot which the kerosene vapour fireball turned into as it burnt
and exited from the side of the tower. The difference between the colours of the smoke is
not necessarily evidence for thermate.
I believe Bollyn made his suggestion to give support to Professor Steven Jones' identification of the molten metal pouring out of the South Tower as
iron. They have worked together on this problem. But his idea is wrong, because it would have made no sense to load just one floor with thermate. Even
with damage from fire and the plane's collision, the powder could not have been distributed to any more than a few of the 110 floors. How Bollyn
thinks this would lead to steel girders many floors further down being weakened because parts of them melted is beyond me! It makes no sense of the
very purpose that Professor Jones has claimed for the thermate he believes he has detected, namely, to ensure complete destruction of the tower. I
think the lead batteries on the 81st floor were
real batteries that melted in the fire, so that it was molten lead (melting point = 327.5
degrees Centigrade - below the temperatures of the fires) that poured out of the 81st floor - the very floor that the batteries were located! Not
coincidental, I suggest. Bollyn makes much of the fact that he was told by the Japanese bank employee that the batteries were never turned on,
suggesting they were not real ones. But, if they were only meant to provide backup electric current to computers during a power failure, what is
suspicious about that?
I have no doubt that Bollyn is being targetted because of his writings about 9/11. But it is because he is a journalist who is raising awkward
questions about 9/11 and - more seriously - publicising the research of scientists whose findings seem to contradict the official story. Don't,
however, conclude that it necessarily means that he is getting at the actual truth.