
Burning Times
There's video shot on 9-11 which clearly shows molten metal streaming out of the upper stories of one of the Twin Towers. It was orange in color.
That's crucial, because the "official story" is that the molten metal came from the passenger jet which struck the building as it was made largely of easily-meltable aluminum. But aluminum does not turn red when it transitions to a liquid state. It stays a uniform silvery color.
Silver, not orange.
So what type of molten metal is orange? Well, steel for one thing, but the fire was nowhere near hot enough to melt steel. Not even close. To start with, all of the aircraft fuel burned away almost instantly in the initial fireball, but kerosene itself can never melt steel. The only heat source left was the fire from burning office equipment, and let me tell you, friends, that won't melt steel either. But what can melt steel?
Thermate can. It's a weaponized version of thermite, a material capable of burning so intensely it can cut through tank armor like butter.
Also note that the smoke from the buildings just before they crumbled was largely white. As any fireman will tell you, smoke is black when organic material is combusting but turns white when steam occurs as a result of the introduction of water. But since the building's water systems were destroyed when the planes hit the buildings, where did the white smoke come from?
It came, again, from thermate which, when combusting, throws off abundant amounts of white smoke.
These two facts alone should give anyone good reason to question the official account of that terrible day and everything that has occurred since.
=Lefty=
Note: Comments have been disabled as the Konservative Disinformation Korps has discovered this posting, and I'm not going to waste my time constantly deleting their drivel.


Salon.com
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