29-10-2010, 06:51 PM
Thanks Peter. No criticism directed at you btw (and I also realize you're not putting your weight behind the story). You know what high regard I hold you in.
The evidence for Thermite in the Twin Towers seems very good to me (as a non scientific non techie sort). And as a non scientific non techie person the possibility of a nuclear explosion to damage the Pentagon and Bali Disco Club still seems highly unlikely. Overkill is probably the word I'm looking for.
Would such a detonation not leave glass marbles on the surface as was the case in underground nuke explosions during the 1950's in Nevada and other testing grounds? Would it not kick off all sorts of nuclear "sniffer" sensors and have Emergency Services severely "tooled-up" in Chernobyl type MOP4 kit, rather than ambling around for days and weeks afterwards in normal service issued attire? Would it be so specific - i.e. accurately target a very small (and virtually uninhabited) part of the Pentagon/Bali Disco rather than having much wider devastation area?
But yes you're right, we would benefit from someone far more knowledgeable in these matters providing a more penetrating and insightful analysis.
The evidence for Thermite in the Twin Towers seems very good to me (as a non scientific non techie sort). And as a non scientific non techie person the possibility of a nuclear explosion to damage the Pentagon and Bali Disco Club still seems highly unlikely. Overkill is probably the word I'm looking for.
Would such a detonation not leave glass marbles on the surface as was the case in underground nuke explosions during the 1950's in Nevada and other testing grounds? Would it not kick off all sorts of nuclear "sniffer" sensors and have Emergency Services severely "tooled-up" in Chernobyl type MOP4 kit, rather than ambling around for days and weeks afterwards in normal service issued attire? Would it be so specific - i.e. accurately target a very small (and virtually uninhabited) part of the Pentagon/Bali Disco rather than having much wider devastation area?
But yes you're right, we would benefit from someone far more knowledgeable in these matters providing a more penetrating and insightful analysis.
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
