Difference between revisions of "9-11/WTC7/Destruction"
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==BBC Editor's response the Jane Standley report and video== | ==BBC Editor's response the Jane Standley report and video== | ||
− | In February 2007, In response to considerable external pressure over the report and video Richard Porter, one of the BBC's senior editors, posted two separate Blog articles endeavoring to explain how it was that the BBC had reported the collapse of one of the tallest buildings in New York fully half an hour before it did eventually collapse. The posts followed the broadcast of the 9/11 episode of their feature series 'The Conspiracy Files'. They adopt a similarly patronising tone complete with de-rigeur use of the pejorative 'Conspiracy theory' and its derivatives. At the time of writing (June 2010) these blog posts are still on the BBC web site. <ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/theeditors/2007/02/part_of_the_conspiracy.html BBC Editor Blog - Part of the Conspiracy]</ref> and <ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/theeditors/2007/03/part_of_the_conspiracy_2.html BBC Editors Blog - Part of the Conspiracy (2)]</ref> They have also been archived on WikiSpooks. | + | In February 2007, In response to considerable external pressure over the report and video Richard Porter, one of the BBC's senior editors, posted two separate Blog articles endeavoring to explain how it was that the BBC had reported the collapse of one of the tallest buildings in New York fully half an hour before it did eventually collapse. The posts followed the broadcast of the 9/11 episode of their feature series 'The Conspiracy Files'. They adopt a similarly patronising tone complete with de-rigeur use of the pejorative 'Conspiracy theory' and its derivatives. At the time of writing (June 2010) these blog posts are still on the BBC web site. <ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/theeditors/2007/02/part_of_the_conspiracy.html BBC Editor Blog - Part of the Conspiracy]</ref> and <ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/theeditors/2007/03/part_of_the_conspiracy_2.html BBC Editors Blog - Part of the Conspiracy (2)]</ref> . They have also been archived on WikiSpooks. |
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 19:46, 30 May 2010
though be advised that the official narrative is particularly suspect.
Until recently, few people had seen video footage showing the collapse of the 47-storey WTC building seven. But the event was recorded from several different angles by the major US news networks. As evidenced by masses of video footage [1] the collapse is clearly a controlled demolition, and an extremely professional one at that. Nothing else can explain the perfectly symmetrical collapse, at free-fall speed, into its own footprint.
Why was it demolished and who planted the explosives? Why do the FEMA and NIST reports try to explain the collapse based purely on impact damage from tower debris and randomly distributed fires? These effects would have weakened the supporting columns asymmetrically and, assuming sufficient damage - a BIG assumption, that asymmetry would have caused substantial tipping during collapse.
Contents
Reports of the collapse
At 4:57 EST, BBC NYC correspondent Jane Standley, in conversation with Philip Hayton the BBC London Presenter, reported live o air, that the building had collapsed. The 'collapse' was headlined in the 5:00pm new roundups of both the BBC and US TV channels. The video of her report has her framed against a large window with a view of the smoking WTC site in the background and building 7 (which she was reporting no longer existed) clearly and prominently visible in the background. [2] The live video feed was severed at 5:15pm whilst she was still talking and the building collapsed shortly thereafter at 5:21pm
BBC Editor's response the Jane Standley report and video
In February 2007, In response to considerable external pressure over the report and video Richard Porter, one of the BBC's senior editors, posted two separate Blog articles endeavoring to explain how it was that the BBC had reported the collapse of one of the tallest buildings in New York fully half an hour before it did eventually collapse. The posts followed the broadcast of the 9/11 episode of their feature series 'The Conspiracy Files'. They adopt a similarly patronising tone complete with de-rigeur use of the pejorative 'Conspiracy theory' and its derivatives. At the time of writing (June 2010) these blog posts are still on the BBC web site. [3] and [4] . They have also been archived on WikiSpooks.