home go links go books go opinion go gallery go projects go resumé go
about this site
archives
book reviews
"to read" list
tech books
search books
books archive
last 10 posts
quotes
cluetrain
cluetrain (mirrored)
randobracket
image auth
search engine hits
  hit history
indexer stats
user agent list
HTML (view)
  (most up-to-date)
MS Word (dl)
code examples
doesntsuck.com
doesntsuck.com

June 17, 2005

wtc7 links   (link)

http://wtc7.net/about.html
WTC7.net was created to address the suspicious silence surrounding the total collapse of the 47 story skyscraper known as WTC 7, or Building 7. Except for reports of the collapse on the day of the attack, most conspicuously lacking footage, mention of Building 7 has been essentially non-existent in the mainstream and even alternative press.

http://wtc7.batcave.net/7.html
http://globalresearch.ca/articles/LOU308A.html
Mysteries abound about World Trade Center 7's (WTC-7) demise on September 11. In the early evening in the Big Apple of that horrific day this 47-story steel building suddenly collapsed. An odd series of failures had occurred.

They began when a small amount of debris falls from the implosion of World Trade Center 1, a block away. Somehow small fires subsequently break out in WTC-7. The fireproofing systems completely fail. The fires burn all day from an unknown fuel. Eventually, the flames reach tanks of diesel fuel at ground level. Suddenly, the penthouse begins to fall. The entire lower levels immediately experience the same massive failures. About seven seconds later the entire building is gone. It takes a minute for 2 million square feet of office space to become a large pile of rubble.

http://portland.indymedia.org/en/2005/02/310898.shtml
Unlike the twin trade towers (and WTC 7), this 32 story steel beamed building remains standing after burning for 17 hours straight. Does steel act differently in Spain or are we confronted with yet another 9-11 anomoly?

Posted by yargevad at June 17, 2005 12:42 PM


This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.