Subject: Re: Do we all agree that 9/11 was an inside job//Debunkers ARE implicated
From: "H. Bosch" <hbosch@charter.net>
Date: 30/06/2006, 19:22
Newsgroups: alt.alien.research,alt.alien.visitors,alt.paranet.ufo,sci.skeptic,alt.fan.art-bell

"Amanda Angelika" <manic_mandy@hotmail.com> wrote in
message
news:Oz8pg.7431$ST2.1504@newsfe5-win.ntli.net...
In news:h659a2lts2m8rhnf2unu2rvnl36ap9k80f@4ax.com,
Widdershins <sinistre@liripipe.com> typed:
Fri, 30 Jun 2006 02:21:42 GMT, "Amanda Angelika"
<manic_mandy@hotmail.com> licked the point of a #2
Yellow Pencil, and
wrote:

In
news:1151394518.557162.174840@y41g2000cwy.googlegroups.com,
houlepn@attglobal.net <houlepn@attglobal.net>
typed:
BornN2BS wrote:

The difference between heat and temperature is
no more relevant
than the relationship between pressure and
temperature where the
9/11 tragedy is concerned. It does, however,
serve as another tool
of distraction for those who wish to clog the
airways with obscure
prychobabble. Why do you choose to ignore the
issue Mr. Graffiti.
How about we just get down to business here. (1)
question: WHAT IS
THE MELTING POINT OF STEEL? answer: 2000 degrees
farenheit. (2)
question: WHAT CAUSED THE STEEL INFRASTRUCTURE
TO FAIL. answer:
??????????????????

Steel would lose half its strength at a
temperature of 650C (1200F).

A gas cooker flame is around 800C. These flames
regularly come into
contact with Steel, Copper and aluminium cookware
for sustained
periods without having any adverse affect on the
metal at all.

You are one stoopid bitch! Do you leave metal pots
on a gas hob
empty and unattended? Do you know what happens when
you do?
If left uhnattended long enough, the non-ferrous
pots melt. the
cast iron, and stainless lose their temper, and can
easily get
distorted.

Your analogy is flawed. when a pot is placed on a
cook top, it
generally has something in it, like a liquid, or
something that has
quite a bit of liquid in it, for instance,
vegetables. Water absorbs
great amounts of heat, and when it begins to boil,
the heat
disipates. Same with anything else being cooked.
The heat is first
absorbed, then it disipates. Usually in the form of
steam.

If the pots are allowed to cook themselves dry,
there will be an
effect. Try it for yourself.

That's due to lack of conductivity. The steel in the
WTCs would have been a
very good conductor of heat since it was attached to
the ground.

<snip>

What does the cooling system of an IC engine do?
Actually, the
overheated engine seizes from lack of proper
lubrication, but
I doubt you knew that.

Actually combustion heat is cooled with water or in
some cases air.
Lubricants help reduce friction so keep moving parts
cool, but are not
generally the primary means of cooling an engine.

-- 
Amanda

Amanda you should give it up.  You get more ridiculous
with every post.  You think you know things but you
don't know squat.

H.