As long as you describe with your own words what you think happened and why, I am OK.
Syzygys said:P.S.: I don't care about Kevin Ryan either...
You can start, since I can't do an opening argument without knowing what you are saying. Concentrate on the WHY and WHO and in the HOW just explain how much exploding material was used and how many people were needed to distribute and place it in the towers in how much time....
Syzygys said:P.S.: "Applying to authority" is an expression in logic. It is a logical fallacy when someone incorrectly applies to authority (Joe says it is this and this) when Joe is not an expert on the subject...
As long as you describe with your own words what you think happened and why, I am OK.
P.S.: I don't care about Kevin Ryan either...
As long as you describe with your own words what you think happened and why, I am OK.
P.S.: I don't care about Kevin Ryan either...
I should have included that in the first debate rules. This was why I got so frustrated with you scott...I really just wanted to hear you thoughts and opinions...not Tony's or anyone else.
Before you start scott...I would look at some of formal debates from James R...and use him as an example for the wording and layout.
To tell you the honest truth, I think you're really making this much too hard. I have never claimed that I have solid evidence for the why or the who. The solid evidence is in the how.
There are many people who can be cited as experts-
This is how many of my discussions with Scott went.Not only that, but if someone else can express an argument better then I can, why on earth should I dilute its substance by putting it in 'my own words'?.
In all honesty, why should it always be my words? And when have I said that I have all the answers?
I ask members to recall that this forum is the Formal Debates forum. The rules on how threads are to be used here are quite strict - purposefully so. I ask you to read the following thread before proceeding:
[thread=74142]How the Formal Debates forum works[/thread]
A few extracts about Proposals:
A "proposal" thread suggests a topic for debate, and also acts as an invitation for particular members to participate in the formal debate, which will take place in a separate thread.
The proposal thread is also the place where members must agree to the rules of the particular debate before starting the actual debate. Once there is agreement as to who the participants are, and what the rules will be, threads in the next two categories may be created.
...
Note that Proposal threads should not discuss the topic - just the parameters of the debate.
James R said:I overlooked the first Debate thread on the topic of WTC collapse in the Formal Debates forum, but it wasn't really organised correctly. I will need to review it to see whether it is suitable for this subforum.
James R said:In the current thread, I'm already seeing people discussing the actual topic, as well as talking about past conversations and going off on other tangents. A Proposal thread in this forum is NOT for the discussion of the topic. It is to determine definitely, so nobody is in any doubt, who will be debating and what the agreed rules of the debate will be. That's all.
James R said:So, please stick to the topic.
You need to decide who is joining this debate, and you need to negotiate the rules.
Multiple threads covering the same debate will not be allowed. The debate must be self-contained in one thread. Participants must be decided before the debate begins. People will not be allowed to join in half way through.
James R said:There will, as usual, be a Discussion thread associated with the debate, which will remain open after the debate itself has ended.
James R said:Please do NOT open a Debate thread until:
(1) A list of participants is agreed (This list should also appear in the first post of the Debate thread.)
(2) The rules of the debate are agreed.
James R said:All of the agreed rules should be posted in this thread in a single post unless the standard rules are being used, along with the names of the debaters. The rules may also be posted in the first post of the debate itself, or a link to the relevant rules post here included in the opening post of the debate.
No. Your posts mainly consist of 'Kevin Ryan says this' or 'Steven Jones debunked the official story with this'. When their points are challenged you aren't able to defend them yourself so you just repeatedly post their comments over and over. That isn't debating.And the reason I've posted excerpts from the same articles time and again is because you didn't learn enough from them the previous times.
But your "sound evidence" appears to be little more than "Kevin Ryan said the fires weren't hot enough".shaman, I have found that you rely too much on diplomas and the like when it suits you, and scoff at them when it doesn't. I think that official expertise is a good start; however, sound evidence beats any credential. .