- Most people -- or certainly many people, especially in
the U.S. -- believe the complete structural failure and total collapse
of the World Trade Center towers was caused by the combustion of large
quantities of jet fuel, dispersed and ignited after "hijacked"
jets crashed into each tower on Sept. 11, 2001. That is the scenario promulgated
to the far corners of the globe by official U.S. government sources.
-
- Interestingly, jet fuel -- somewhat similar to common
kerosene and not much different than charcoal lighter fluid -- burns at
roughly 875 degrees. Whether a little or a lot of fuel is burned, it still
burns at roughly the same temperature. Now: Think about all the kerosene
burning in all those kerosene heaters (and lanterns), constructed primarily
of thin, low-grade, steel sheet metal. Think about all those kerosene heaters
burning merrily away, with temperatures perhaps approaching 875 degrees
at the hottest. Think about how parts of all those kerosene heaters would
then turn into bubbling pools of melted steel before the horrified eyes
of countless poor souls who had no idea the fuel used in their heaters
would actually "MELT" the heaters themselves.
-
- Of course, this does NOT happen -- which gives us a pretty
good idea that what had been sold far and wide by the U.S. government and
innumerable media outlets as the "cause" of the trade center
towers' collapse is in fact absolute fiction and fantasy, without the slightest
shred of scientific fact or collaborative evidence and testimony to support
such monstrous and utter nonsense. Hardened steel such as that used in
the WTC beams and girders needs temperatures of approximately TWENTY-EIGHT
HUNDRED (2,800) degrees to actually melt, and temperatures approaching
2,000 degrees to turn bright red and soften,
-
- The official version of the collapse of the WTC towers
is -- again -- that burning jet fuel eventually melted or liquefied the
massive and seriously hard steel beams of the WTC tower(s), to the point
where the beams all gave way, unilaterally and simultaneously throughout
both the gigantic structures and causing their total and nearly instantaneous
collapse. Well, if such doesn't happen with kerosene heaters, you can bet
it doesn't happen to huge steel-beamed buildings -- and indeed it never
has; especially when the fires which supposedly "caused" such
total structural failure had in fact long since largely burned themselves
out.
-
- In fact, nearly a year after the monumental and treacherous
catastrophe which struck lower Manhattan on Sept. 11, 2001, an audio tape
of firefighter communications was finally released -- which proves that
the actual conditions at and near the point of impact in the north WTC
tower only moments before the building's collapse were totally inconsistent
with the conditions which had to have existed for the official version
to be even minimally correct.
-
- Firefighters who had reached the eightieth floor of the
north tower reported they were eyewitnesses to fact much of the fire caused
by burning jet fuel had by then largely burned out, although some burning
and smoldering areas still remained. Not once did firefighters on site
at " ground zero" of ground zero indicate the slightest concern
that fires were still burning at an intensity which threatened their own
or others' safety -- certainly not that conditions were so severe that
the very integrity of the entire structure itself was threatened! On the
contrary: they indicated that conditions were controllable: that they planned
to conduct survivors safely out of the building, and to then bring in equipment
and personnel to extinguish any remaining burning/smoldering areas.
-
- And what, exactly, does all this mean? It means that
the total structural failure of the two massive, superbly-engineered/designed
edifices known as the WTC towers did NOT result from jet fuel flash-fires
burning at under 900 degrees Fahrenheit -- when steel used in WTC construction
needed temperatures over THREE TIMES HIGHER to actually "MELT."
-
- And THIS means that the towers were in fact toppled by
use of BOMBS or similar methods.
-
- And THIS means that a stupendously far-reaching conspiracy
and cover-up -- involving the highest levels of US government -- lies behind
the 9-11 "attacks on America".
-
- by Robert Anderson
-
- __________________________________
-
- http://www.nytimes.com/2002/11/09/nyregion/09TOWE.
- html?ex=1059105600&en=3a84112d9c0719b9&ei=5070
-
- http://www.nytimes.com/2002/11/09/nyregion/09TOWE.
- html?ex=1059105600&en=3a84112d9c0719b9&ei=5070
-
- http://www.nytimes.com/2002/11/09/nyregion/09TAPE.
- html?ex=1059105600&en=dc9c7f7df4341393&ei=5070
-
- -- 'Nowhere on the tape is there any indication that
firefighters had the slightest indication that the tower had become unstable
or that it could fall.' --
-
- -- ' "Just two hose lines to attack two isolated
pockets of fire. "We should be able to knock it down with two lines,"
he tells the firefighters of Ladder Company 15 who were following him up
the stairs of the doomed tower.' --
-
- Fire Department Tape Reveals No Awareness of Imminent
Doom
-
- By KEVIN FLYNN and JIM DWYER
-
- The voices, captured on a tape of Fire Department radio
transmissions, betray no fear. The words are matter-of-fact.
-
- Two hose lines are needed, Chief Orio Palmer says from
an upper floor of the badly damaged south tower at the World Trade Center.
-
- Lt. Joseph G. Leavey is heard responding: "Orio,
we're on 78, but we're in the B stairway. Trapped in here. We got to put
some fire out to get to you."
-
- Ladder 15 had finally found the fire after an arduous
climb to the 78th floor, according to the tape. They were in the B stairwell.
On the other side of the fire were hundreds of people, blocked from fleeing
by smoke and flame on the stairs. Chief Palmer was facing similar fires
in the A stairwell, across the floor.
-
- "We're gonna knock down some fire here in the B
Stair," Lieutenant Leavey is heard telling one of his firefighters.
"We'll meet up with you. You get over to the A Stair and help out
Chief Palmer."
-
- The time was 9:56 a.m. The firefighters had just arrived
at a place where, 54 minutes earlier, many people had been waiting for
elevators when the second plane came crashing through the building. Now
Chief Palmer and Ladder 15 were surrounded by the wounded whom they hoped
to evacuate.
-
- Like the cockpit voice recorder from a downed jetliner,
this tape, discovered in an adjacent building several weeks after Sept.
11, is providing a glimpse into unseen corners of the tragedy and the resolute
advance of firefighters as they encountered the largest catastrophe of
their lives.
-
- The 78-minute tape, which was found in a room at 5 World
Trade Center where radio transmissions were monitored, is the only known
audiotape of firefighters at the scene. In recent months, officials of
the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which maintained the recording
system, have allowed fire officials and family members to listen to it.
It was not publicly released, however, until this week. The release came
after federal prosecutors, responding to a court motion by The New York
Times, said that making it public would not interfere with the prosecution
of terrorists.
-
- Officials from the Port Authority and the Fire Department
are still debating what the tape tells them about the breakdowns in radio
communication that day. There are several long stretches of silence on
the tape. Transmissions from only a few of the companies that operated
in the south tower are recorded. A few additional snippets of conversation
can be heard from firefighters in the north tower, where radios using the
same frequency were also monitored.
-
- But sections of the tape provide vivid images of the
firefighters: the breathless voice of Chief Palmer, a marathon runner,
after dashing up dozens of flights; the assurances from firefighters to
him that they are coming on his heels; the effort to create a medical staging
area for the wounded on the 40th floor.
-
- At several points in the tape, fire commanders can be
heard speaking with urgency. A commander alerts a colleague that he needs
more companies to handle what he is facing in the south tower. The chiefs
discuss the need to get more elevators into service, to carry firefighters
up and to transport the injured back down.
-
- But nowhere on the tape is there any indication that
firefighters had the slightest indication that the tower had become unstable
or that it could fall.
-
- "Chief, I'm going to stop on 44," Stephen Belson,
an aide to Chief Palmer, tells him at 9:25 as he ascends.
-
- "Take your time," the chief responds.
-
- A half-hour later, the tape reveals, firefighters from
Ladder 15 had loaded 10 injured people into an elevator and begun a descent
to the lobby. Down below, fire commanders were waiting, hoping to use that
elevator, the only working one in the building, to ferry additional firefighters
back up to the heavily damaged floors. But suddenly the elevator stopped,
according to the tape.
-
- "You're going to have to get a different elevator,"
a firefighter from Ladder 15 says over the radio. "We're chopping
through the wall to get out."
-
- A few seconds later, at 9:58 a.m., Chief Palmer tries
to raise someone from the ladder company. "Battalion 7 to Ladder 15,"
he calls.
-
- But the tape remains silent.
-
-
- ______________________________________
-
- For well over a year, the Port Authority of New York
and New Jersey refused to release the audiotape of firefighters' communications
from the World Trade Center during the September 11 attacks. In early November
2002, the tape was released to the New York Times, then to other unspecified
"news outlets" (according to the Associated Press). To my knowledge,
the NYT is the only outlet to post excerpts from the tape; no one has yet
posted the entire thing.
-
- Below are transcripts of all portions that have been
released. You can listen to them at the NYT's site by going to this page.
In the right hand column is a box labeled "Multimedia." Inside
it, click on "Interactive Feature: The Tale of the Tape."
-
-
- [read "9/11 Tape Raised Added Questions on Radio
Failures" and "Fire Department Tape Reveals No Awareness of Imminent
Doom"]
-
-
-
-
- 9:25 a.m.
-
- Ladder 15: "Go ahead, Irons."
-
- Ladder 15 Irons: "Just got a report from the director
of Morgan Stanley. Seventy-eight seems to have taken the brunt of this
stuff, there's a lot of bodies, they say the stairway is clear all the
way up, though."
-
- Ladder 15: "Alright, ten-four Scott. What, what
floor are you on?"
-
- Ladder 15 Irons: "Forty-eight right now."
-
- Ladder 15: "Alright, we're coming up behind you."
-
-
- 9:31 a.m.
-
- Battalion Seven Aide: "Battalion Seven, you want
me to relay?"
-
- Ladder 15: "Yeah, Steve tell Chief Palmer they got
reports that there's more planes in the area, we may have to back down
here."
-
- Battalion Seven Aide: "Ten-four."
-
- "Seven Alpha to Seven."
-
- Battalion Seven: "Steve. Seven to Seven Alpha."
-
- Ladder 15: "Fifteen to 15 Roof."
-
- "Fifteen Roof."
-
- Ladder 15: "We got reports of another incoming plane.
We may have to take cover. Stay in the stairwell."
-
- Ladder 15 Roof: "Ten-four."
-
- Ladder 15: "Fifteen to 15 Roof. That plane's ours.
I repeat. It's ours. What floor are you on, Scotty?"
-
- Ladder 15 Roof: "Fifty-four."
-
- Ladder 15: "Alright. Keep making your way up. We're
behind you."
-
- Ladder 15 Roof: "Ten-four."
-
-
- 9:37 a.m.
-
- Ladder 15 Lieutenant: "Tommy, listen carefully.
I'm sending all the injured down to you on 40. You're going to have to
get'em down to the elevator. There's about 10 to 15 people coming down
to you."
-
- Ladder 15 Firefighter: "Okay."
-
- Ladder 15 Lieutenant: "Ten civilians coming down.
Fifteen to OV."
-
- Ladder 15 Firefighter: "Got that, I'm on 40 right
now, Lieu."
-
- 9:39 a.m.
-
- Ladder 15 Lieutenant: "Alright Tommy, when you take
people down to the lobby, try to get an EMS crew back."
-
- Ladder 15 Firefighter: "Definitely."
-
-
- 9:43 a.m.
-
- Battalion Seven Chief: "Battalion Seven to Ladder
15 Roof, what's your progress?"
-
- Ladder 15 Roof: "Sixty-three, Battalion."
-
- Battalion Seven Chief: "Ten-four."
-
- Battaltion Nine Chief: "Battalion Nine to Battalion
Seven."
-
- Battalion Seven Chief: "Go ahead Battaltion Nine."
-
- Battalion Nine Chief: "Orio, I couldn't find a bank
to bring you up any highter. I'm on the 40th floor, what can I do for you?"
-
- Battalion Seven Chief: "We're going to have to hoof
it. I'm on 69 now, but we need a higher bank, kay."
-
- Battalion Nine Chief: "What stairway you in Orio?"
-
- Battalion Seven Chief: "The center of the building,
boy, boy."
-
- "Tac One to Tac One Alpha."
-
- Battalion Seven Chief: "Battalion Seven to Ladder
15 Roof, what floor?"
-
- Battalion Nine Chief: "Battalion Nine to Battalion
Seven."
-
- Battalion Seven Chief: "...Battalion Nine."
-
- Battalion Nine Chief: "Orio, I'm going to try and
get a couple of CFRD engines on the 40th floor so send any victims down
here, I'll start up a staging area."
-
- Battalion Seven Chief: "...find a fireman service
elevator close to 40, if we get some more cars in that bank, we'll be alright."
-
-
- 9:48 a.m.
-
- Ladder 15: "Battalion Fifteen to Battalion Seven."
-
- Battalion Seven: "Go Ladder 15."
-
- Ladder 15: "What do you got up there, Chief?"
-
- Battalion Seven Chief: "I'm still in boy stair 74th
floor. No smoke or fire problems, walls are breached, so be careful."
-
- Ladder 15: "Yeah Ten-Four, I saw that on 68. Alright,
we're on 71 we're coming up behind you."
-
- Battalion Seven Chief: "Ten-four. Six more to go."
-
- Ladder 15: "Let me know when you see more fire."
-
- Battalion Seven Chief: "I found a marshall on 75."
-
-
- 9:49 a.m.
-
- Ladder 15: "Fifteen to 15 OV. Fifteen to 15 OV.
-
- "Fifteen OV."
-
- Ladder 15: "Tommy, have you made it back down to
the lobbby yet?"
-
- Ladder 15 OV: "The elevator's screwed up."
-
- Ladder 15: "You can't move it?"
-
- Ladder 15 OV: "I don't want to get stuck in the
shaft."
-
- 9:50 a.m.
-
- Ladder 15: "Alright Tommy. It's imperative that
you go down to the lobby command post and get some people up to 40. We
got injured people up here on 70. If you make it to the lobby command post
see if they can somehow get elevators past the 40th floor. We got people
injured all the way up here."
-
- Battalion Seven Aide: "Battaltion Seven Alpha to
Seven."
-
- Battalion Seven Chief: "Go Steve."
-
- Battalion Seven Aide: "Yeah Chief, I'm on 55, I
got to rest. I'll try to get up there as soon as possible."
-
- Battalion Seven Chief: "Ten-four."
-
-
- 9:50 a.m.
-
- "Anybody see the highway one car? Highway one car
we need it for an escort to the hospital for a fireman."
-
- Battalion Seven Chief: "Battalion Seven to Ladder
15."
-
- "15 Irons."
-
- Ladder 15: "Fifteen to 15 Roof and Irons."
-
- Battalion Six Chief: "Battalion Six to command post."
-
- 9:52 a.m.
-
- Battalion Seven Chief: "Battalion Seven to Battalion
Seven Alpha."
-
- "Freddie, come on over. Freddie, come on over by
us."
-
- Battalion Seven Chief: "Battalion Seven ... Ladder
15, we've got two isolated pockets of fire. We should be able to knock
it down with two lines. Radio that, 78th floor numerous 10-45 Code Ones."
-
- Ladder 15: "What stair are you in, Orio?"
|