We can see the smoke pouring out of WTC-7 during some early footage, and the building collapses starting around 1:50 (when the penthouse disappears). Note in particular that although the woman is clearly frightened when the building collapses, there are no sounds of ear-splitting explosions prior to the collapse, as happens in controlled demolitions.
Around 20:00 in, there is some very scary footage of somebody walking around after the South Tower collapsed, but before the fall of the North Tower. Starting around 31:00 in, one of the CBS reporters and his cameraman go up close and personal to WTC-7; it's quite gripping footage. I had seen the part where the guy talks about this being as close as he's ever come to a war zone, but not the bit before with the views of WTC-7 as the flames roar.
And who's that who pops up at 43:54? Why, it's Brian Good's bete noir, Willie Rodriguez. For those who missed it, Brian commented in the last post:
Maybe Willie evacuated Felipe David (and maybe not) but I'd hardly call that heroic. Then he went into a burning building. Big deal--the fire was 90 floors above, and everybody knows modern buildings don't fall from fire. Not one person will verify his claim that he climbed to the 39th floor opening doors. David Lim is named in Willie's account six times at least, and Willie is named not once in Lim's account.
By Willie's account, as soon as he learned there was any danger at all, he abandoned his quest to rescue his friends at Windows on the World and he took his allegedly-life-saving "Key of Hope" with him and went to evacuate one man on the 27th floor.
If his claim that he saved hundreds of lives by opening doors up to 39 was correct, then by turning back he was abandoning hundreds of people to die. He covers this over by claiming that floors 65 to 43 fell down so they were already dead. It's total baloney. Hundreds of people did not die on floors 65 to 43.
But as you can hear, Willie's story was the same that day. He mentions Lim by name, and talks about a collapse of floor 65. You know what this makes me think of? Way back when, there was a History Channel documentary on the Troofers where a college professor remarked that they want to remake the story so that they're the heroes. Brian Good would have saved everybody in Windows on the World had he been there. And if he'd been at the Pentagon he would have shot down AA77 before it crashed.
But as it is, he can only be a hero on the internet by denying the heroism of others.
Update: Brian tries to rescue his point in the comments (ignoring his being corrected on prior mistakes):
Pat, Willie went into a burning building when the fire was 90 floors away. The only thing that makes his action heroic is if you believe his claims that there were bombs going off--and there's no reason to believe it. As soon as he understood that there was actual danger to himself, he started to leave--and lied about his reason for leaving, claiming a 22-story collapse that never happened.
But what's this:
Lim:
"I literally had to kick him out. This guy wanted to stay--"
Of course, Brian Good, the real hero janitor of 9-11 would not have submitted to being kicked out. He would have informed Lim that there was no chance the tower could collapse, and he would have saved everybody in the building. Because that's the kind of guy Brian Good is.
Source: http://screwloosechange.blogspot.com/2011/04/fascinating-cbs-footage-from-9-11.html
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ReplyDeleteNone of us knows for sure what we will do in a moment of crisis--unless our experiences of similar crises informs us or motivates us.
ReplyDeleteI can tell you what I would not do. After marching up the stairs with other men, few of whom returned, I would not travel around the world lying about that day and stealing their glory. I would not appropriate the true deeds of a true hero, Pablo Ortiz, (who died on 9/11) and claim they were my own.
Willie's claim that his Key of Hope saved hundreds is simply not true. His claim that people were trapped behind locked fire exit doors is a lie. About 100 civilians died under the impact zones, so survival rates on Willie's 39 floors were no higher than on any other floor.
Willie's claim that he "single-handed rescued 15 persons" is also not true. He showed his co-workers to the street--when they already knew their way to the street.
Willie's dishonesty was thoroughly exposed by the firefighter John Schroeder who told a story that Willie had saved the lives of a dozen firefighters. Mr. Schroeder told three completely different versions of this story, and Willie never denied any of them.
By libeling and intimidating his critics Willie managed to maintain quite a nice run, but it appears it's about over now. His only serious news coverage lately was an article in Der Spiegel which concluded that Willie's story was an attempt to pass a $1 bill off as a $20 bill, but he just might be crazy enough to believe his own nonsense.