The only thing about it that still bothers me is the risk they took if this is really how they did it.. what if god forbid the demolition failed to completely do the job and there was still half a tower left standing full of clear unavoidable demolition evidence? They had to not only get that right once, but also a second time and then a third time on building 7. Just imagine how significant it would've been if that didn't turn out perfectly
I'm only speculating, but I believe the engineering was done in top secret somewhere like Area 51, but that's just anyone's guess. You can't fly within 12 miles of the perimeter without being warned to turn around then shot down if you don't comply. It's been like that since the Eisenhower presidency. But they had already developed advanced nanothermite devices ( They've known about thermite for 100 years since the early railroad days for cutting and welding steel.)
Many, many hypothesis' being approached as to how it may have been orchestrated.
That's the problem.. many hypotheses. There will never be a new investigation unless everyone gets on board with one idea.. ONE. I say building 7 and leave the towers out of it, but it's never going to happen because too many people are married to those towers for some reason. They've become a red herring if you ask me. Stick with building 7 it's the only smoking gun that exists.
I wonder why no one ever talks about the impressive list of tenants in WTC7 nor anything about the top level investigations that were destroyed when the building came down:
Tenant Square Feet Leased Floors Occupied Industry Notes
First State Management Group 4,000 21 Insurance
...
Files relating to numerous federal investigations had been housed in 7 World Trade Center.
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission estimated over 10,000 of its cases were affected.[50] Investigative files in the Secret Service's largest field office were lost, with one Secret Service agent saying, "All the evidence that we stored at 7 World Trade, in all our cases, went down with the building."[51] Copies of emails in connection with the WorldCom scandal that were later requested by the SEC from Salomon Brothers, a subsidiary of Citigroup housed in the building, were also destroyed.[52]