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Originally posted by Human_Alien
Not nice to make stuff up
Originally posted by Human_Alien
Would you so kindly link it to me so I can see that they do indeed offer private trash collection?
Originally posted by Human_Alien
I am just after the truth, not making riff with others and certainly not enemies.
Originally posted by Insolubrious
I put the FOIA data into openOffice and sorted it by tenancy date starting. Here's my initial thoughts at a glance of the data:
It looks like the Port Authority took out lots of space in the subgrade floor 284(?) security, chemical spills, storage, policing, structural, carpeting, landscaping, slurry wall etc.I think it's interesting that Raytheon were the last tenants to join on the 1st of the August 2001.
There's a dominant pattern I have noticed here, from the start of 1999 right up to the end of Dec 2000 WTC had a massive amount of tenants join, a record breaker, the most ever in one year, a very good year for tenants indeed! But then suddenly as of the 1st of Jan 2001 only a very tiny number of tenants were willing (or allowed) to join. Unless your name was Port Authority or Raytheon you weren't coming in!
RAYTHEON ENGINEERS & CONSTRUCT 01 AUGUST 2001.
By the looks of things P.A had a room on every floor of the towers, in 1995 you can see they moved in quite literally. Infiltrating the P.A may of been a good way for perps to gain access to various levels of the structure.
Also, you could steal one of Raytheon's directed energy weapons and use that for terrorism.
Oh no I just had a thought - what do you get when you mix the P.A with Raytheon?
Total collapse.
Oh gosh I should of kept that one to myself.
In my opinion the data is probably incorrect, there's only 1317 records here, it doesn't look or feel right to me.
edit on 19-1-2011 by Insolubrious because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by mnpropaganda
American's and the world were led to believe hundreds of companies and corporations with thousands of employee's operated there.
Raytheon Company From Demopedia:
Raytheon Company had an office on the 91st floor of WTC2, above the impact area, yet suffered no casualties. ... Raytheon had also been hit with millions of dollars in fines for padding costs of equipment it sold to the US military. Raytheon also has a hush-hush subsidiary, E-Systems, whose clients include the CIA and NSA.
Raytheon also makes the "bunker buster" GBU- 28, a 5,000-pound bomb and missiles like the TOW, Maverick and Javelin, used in Operation Enduring Freedom. In addition to missiles, Raytheon also builds sensors and radars used on unmanned and manned reconnaissance airplanes used extensively in Afghanistan.
The company has paid millions of dollars in fines for illegal activities. In October 1994, Raytheon paid $4 million to settle government charges that it had inflated the cost of a $71.5 million radar contract. In October 1993, Raytheon paid out $3.7 million to settle U.S. government charges that it had inflated the cost of Patriot missiles. The year before the company paid out $2.75 million for overpricing missile test equipment. In March 1990, Raytheon pleaded guilty in federal court to Judge Albert Bryan, Jr. in Virginia for illegally obtaining secret Air Force budget and planning documents. The company paid a million dollars in fines. In October 1987, the Justice Department signed on to a $36 million lawsuit originally filed by a former Raytheon employee, which alleged that Raytheon submitted false claims for work done on missiles.
www.corpwatch.org...
This is rather surprising as after the hit of the second plane only four person survived who were above the 78th floor where the plane hit.
The buildings were half-empty when the jets struck. USA TODAY estimates 5,000 to 7,000 people were in each tower when the attack began. Earlier estimates ranged from 10,000 to 25,000 per tower. But company head counts show many desks were empty at 8:46 a.m. There were few tourists; the observation deck wasn't scheduled to open until 9:30 a.m.
Most of the dead were in the north tower, the first one hit and the second to collapse. USA TODAY documented 1,434 who died in the north tower vs. 599 in the south tower. (Locations could not be determined for 147 of the building occupants.) An analysis shows that two-thirds of south tower occupants evacuated the upper floors during the 16 1/2 minutes between the attacks. In the north tower, an average of 78 people died per floor at the crash area and above, compared with 19 people per floor in the south tower.
One stairway in the south tower remained open above the crash, but few used it to escape. Stairway A, one of three, was unobstructed from top to bottom. The jet crashed into the 78th through 84th floors of the south tower. A few people escaped from the 78th floor down these stairs. One person went down the stairs from the 81st floor, two from the 84th floor and one from the 91st. Others went up these stairs in search of a helicopter rescue that wasn't possible because of heavy smoke on the rooftop.
Originally posted by thedman
reply to post by Insolubrious
This is rather surprising as after the hit of the second plane only four person survived who were above the 78th floor where the plane hit.
It was that only 4 people BELOW the impact zone died in South Tower - you are wrong
One in the 15 minutes between 1st plane impact on North Tower, many people left the South Tower, in addition
to fact building was only partially occupied at that time
The buildings were half-empty when the jets struck. USA TODAY estimates 5,000 to 7,000 people were in each tower when the attack began. Earlier estimates ranged from 10,000 to 25,000 per tower. But company head counts show many desks were empty at 8:46 a.m. There were few tourists; the observation deck wasn't scheduled to open until 9:30 a.m.
Two - it was actually 18 people who escaped from above the impact zone do to Stairway A having to dogleg
around elevator lobby on 78th floor. Several hundred more died in the building, either from initial impact or as
result of the fires
Most of the dead were in the north tower, the first one hit and the second to collapse. USA TODAY documented 1,434 who died in the north tower vs. 599 in the south tower. (Locations could not be determined for 147 of the building occupants.) An analysis shows that two-thirds of south tower occupants evacuated the upper floors during the 16 1/2 minutes between the attacks. In the north tower, an average of 78 people died per floor at the crash area and above, compared with 19 people per floor in the south tower.
One stairway in the south tower remained open above the crash, but few used it to escape. Stairway A, one of three, was unobstructed from top to bottom. The jet crashed into the 78th through 84th floors of the south tower. A few people escaped from the 78th floor down these stairs. One person went down the stairs from the 81st floor, two from the 84th floor and one from the 91st. Others went up these stairs in search of a helicopter rescue that wasn't possible because of heavy smoke on the rooftop.
www.usatoday.com...
The fortunate few were in position to reach the stairway and escape down