Actually I have seen video footage of the angled 'slicing' effect caused by the special explosive used to bring down the towers. I will check my own links for this video. Jack ----- Original Message ----- From: Bernie Brauer To: geocentrism@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Sunday, August 05, 2007 7:25 PM Subject: [geocentrism] Re: NASA A way to prove that the supporting steel columns of the Twin Towers had been blasted by explosives would be to examine fragments from them among the debris for evidence of what metallurgists call "twinning". But the WTC debris was removed as fast as possible and no forensic examination of the debris was permitted by the FBI or any other government agency. Almost all the 300,000 tons of steel from the Twin Towers was sold to New York scrap dealers and exported to places like China and Korea as quickly as it could be loaded onto the ships, thereby removing the evidence. See Debris Mountain Starts to Shrink, an article which shows that Controlled Demolition Inc. (a world leader in the demolition of tall buildings) was apparently keen to have the debris removed and disposed of as soon as possible and was able to come up with a detailed plan for doing so within eleven days of the collapse of the Twin Towers, suggesting that this company had detailed knowledge of the Twin Towers and the entire WTC complex prior to September 11th. from: http://www.assassinationscience.com/wtc.html A: For the same reason that the scrap metal was immediately whisked away from New York after 11 September 2001. [Robert Bennett] Quite logical. Leave the bodies buried in the rubble and as a memorial to 9/11, to show the terrorists that they could break our will to rebuild and recover. For the same reason in post war Germany and England the building debris was left to this day in London and Dresden and Munich... The inner-city buildings were left as rubble, never rebuilt. 5 months to clear the site = immediately whisked away ??? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Looking for a deal? Find great prices on flights and hotels with Yahoo! FareChase.