Scott,
If you haven't been to busy responding to Shaman's posts in the 9/11 thread from 500 posts ago..
Very funny
MacGyver said:
you might have noticed that I have asked the moderators to close the formal debate thread on 9/11. I figured you probably wouldn't understand, so I thought better explain it to you very simply.
As you stated in your post above, you recently asked for the 9/11 thread to be moved from p.s. to architecture and engineering. You asked this because you thought the 9/11 thread was a respectable scientific argument, and should have it's place in a more respectable subforum than pseudoscience...you were flatly turned down.
Yep. The injustice of it all, sigh
MacGyver said:
So you figured you could move the 9/11 thread to Formal Debates, by proposing a debate thread on 9/11..formal debates has to be better than pseudoscience, right? I guess you were thinking that a formal debate is just like a discussion thread, except everyone is more civil. But a formal debate takes on different form.
I decided to take your challenge because I really wanted to see if you could put together a formal argument about your own position on the collapse.... or if you would do your same old thing and "quote mine" everything...reposting others thoughts that you agree with, and thinking that a response...offering no thoughts of your own.
"thinking that a response... offering no thoughts of your own"? That is definitely syntactically incorrect. In any case, I have certainly offered my own thoughts as well as quoted the thoughts of experts in the field of the WTC collapses.
MacGyver said:
What worse is the sources that you quote mine from. You will literally quote anyone.
I certainly haven't seen you provide any evidence that that is indeed the case.
MacGyver said:
Here is your response to my assertion that:
MacGyver said:
Thousands of gallons of jet fuel instantly ignited a fire across many floors.
Here is your rebuttal to this point:
scott3x said:
In the Journal of 9/11 studies, a thoughtful, if anonymous writer, wrote the following in a letter to the aforementioned site titled Non-animated Visualization Aids to Assist in Understanding the Demolitions of the World Trade Center Twin Towers:
Let's assume that NIST is wrong- that no jet fuel actually went down the elevator shafts and that the full 100% of jet fuel remaining stayed right where it was. This would mean that the impact floors in the south tower had 5.932 gallons, or about 900 cubic feet to work with. A single standard 10'x10' office cubicle filled to 9 feet could house that amount of jet fuel. Approximately 300 such cubicles plus walkways and amenities could have been contained on each of the 110 floors (40,000 square feet) of each Twin Tower.
Here is a picture of a pool that has enough room for 1,017 cubic feet:
You offer nothing of your own... just the repost...
That's not true. But more important, it's also not the point. Whether I say something or whether someone else does, I think you should be focusing on the evidence presented.
and it's from an anonymous post from another 9/11 board.
It's from a peer reviewed site that has gained a fair amount of respect; if it hadn't, why in the world would even debunkers take the time to write responses to papers written there by the likes of Gordon Ross, as
http://911guide.googlepages.com/newtonsbit chronicles.
MacGyver said:
You completely lack the ability to understand why a source like this has ZERO credibility. There's no way to know who said it, where it got his data from or anything.
MacGyver, I personally found where he got his data in one instance; from the NIST report he said he got it from. I even provided the link and the page number in NIST's report. I could check more of the NIST reports he cites, but I really would like you to acknowledge that the report I checked out -is- valid.
MacGyver said:
When I confronted you with this, you told me "he said he got his data from the NIST report, you should look it up" or something like that. This was your source..it's not my job to prove he's not just some nutjob.
You are right to some extent, which is why I -did- check out one of the reports he cites. Apparently you didn't notice though...
MacGyver said:
This to you is evidence and you can't understand when people tell you it's not. I wasn't even sure what point the author was trying to make or what point you were trying to make by posting this.
There were many points made. Please quote something you don't understand and I will try to explain it to you better.
MacGyver said:
You mis-quoted the numbers 5.932 instead of 5,932..and I still don't know what point is being made..
In the case of the 5,932 gallons of jet fuel, it was how much fuel NIST estimated remained in the South Tower (WTC 2) after 20% of it was burned off in the fireball. The point was that there was a lot less fuel to do all the things this magical jet fuel did then some may have believed.
MacGyver said:
the author proposes something and doesn't follow through. He proposes that all of the fuel stayed in the impact area, then he gives that quantity in gallons and cubic feet. Then he notes how a 10 x 10 x 9 cubicle could hold this much. Then he gives an estimate on the total number of cubicles on one floor. Then he posts a picture of a swimming pool that hold approximately the amount mentioned before....and that's it! No point is made.
The point is that it wasn't a whole lot of jet fuel relative to the building. When he said that there were about 300 10x10 cubicles on every one of the 110 floors of the Twin Towers, I think that this would be self evident. NIST itself has stated that the precise amount of fuel is rather irrelevant as it didn't seem to make much of a difference in their tests.
MacGyver said:
What was the purpose of the data given? I said "thousands" of gallons started the fire. You seem to be confirming that with quote that mentions a number around 6000 gallons...which would definitely qualify as thousands.
No one is disputing that they started a fire. The dispute is whether the fires they started could have done much other then burn some office furniture and (unfortunately) people.
MacGyver said:
I specifically set out in the rules that this debate was between you and me. And instead of debating me directly. You took my arguments and asked Tony and the TS guys what they thought..and then reposted their thoughts. I wasn't debating Tony. I was debating you.
At first, I wanted to have Tony and others directly in the debate. You didn't like this idea. But I made it -very]- clear that I would -not- isolate myself from their
knowledge. To do so, in my view, would have been patently foolish.
MacGyver said:
I couldn't get you to give me the opinion on the color of the sky without you having to ask the TS guys first.
Come on MacGyver, I would expect this type of reasoning from John99 or from shaman_, but not from you. I drew on the knowledge of Tony when I was unsure of some points, that's all.
MacGyver said:
When you signed on for this Formal Debate, I guess you thought it would shine a more respectable light on the 9/11. I guess you forgot that you don't know how to formally debate someone.
My understanding of a formal debate is this:
That 2 sides agree to certain terms to discuss an issue. I felt that we had done so. I thought that you understood that, though you didn't like it, I wasn't going to isolate myself from people who could advise me if I wasn't sure about something.
MacGyver said:
I'm not going to waste my time anymore with it. You started a formal debate even though you had no pre-thought out argument to present,
I had many thought out arguments and I presented them in my very first rebuttal; they're here:
http://scott3x.tripod.com/wtc/index.html
MacGyver said:
I might drop in on the 9/11 thread from time to time, but this was a complete waste of time.
Well, I felt that I made many good points, but to each their own.