By TPR BRASSCHECK - I just finished watching a video of physics professor Steven E. Jones' exposition on the scientific impossibility of the WTC collapse for the reasons given by the government and mass media. . . Listening to Professor Jones, I was reminded of how fast all the steel from the crime scene was cut up and shipped to Asia for recycling.
Steel: it's valuable stuff these days. But you know what? In late 2001, it wasn't. In fact, the price of steel on 9-11 was at a historic low.
In fact, in 2001 steel prices were so depressed and Asian interest in steel recycling steel was so low that steel shipping containers were piling up in west coast ports and for sale for pennies on the dollar.
It was cheaper to make new ones than incur the cost of shipping them back empty. Steel containers were so cheap that artists that Bay area artists were buying them for as low as $300 to $500 each.
Steel was so plentiful at the time of 9-11 that it didn't pay to ship empty containers back to China from California to reuse them or recycle the steel.
Yet in this same time period, the steel from the World Trade Center was so valuable that it was shipped all the way from NYC all the way to Asia - a long, long trip by sea. . .
What was the rush? Who was the Asian buyer at a time when steel was a drug on the market?
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