Still            Standing: The Building That Proves WTC 7 Was Imploded
New videos highlight vivid contrast of Mandarin Oriental Hotel fire to fires in WTC 7 before its free fall collapse
 
          
New videos highlight vivid contrast of Mandarin Oriental Hotel fire to fires in WTC 7 before its free fall collapse
 
          New videos of the Mandarin Oriental Hotel fire in Beijing highlight the vivid contrast between the damage it suffered as it was completely consumed by roaring flames, yet remained standing, and the comparative sporadic fires across just 8 floors that led to the complete free fall collapse of WTC 7.
9/11 truth debunkers are in a  bind as            to how to respond to the Beijing skyscraper fire because of  the building's            similarity in size to Building 7 and the gargantuan fire  damage it suffered            in comparison with the limited "office fires" witnessed in            WTC 7. The Mandarin Oriental Hotel is over 500 feet tall, just  100 feet            short of the height of WTC 7.
The fires that consumed the  Beijing            building were on a completely different scale to those  witnessed on            9/11, with the flames so violent and widespread that they  masked almost            the entire view of the building. 
The best debunkers have come  up with            seems to be the false notion that the fires caused a partial  collapse            by making the building "lean". This is of course complete            baloney because the facade of the building was designed to  appear as            if it was leaning in the first place, as the image below  highlights,            with shots before and after the fire.

Since the Beijing building was  still            under construction, sprinkler systems had not been installed,  providing            another similarity to WTC 7, in which sprinkler systems  malfunctioned            before its collapse. The Mandarin Oriental Hotel was also a  steel-framed            building with a concrete core and may even have included steel  salvaged            from the debris of the twin towers and WTC 7 that was hastily            shipped off to China shortly after 9/11.
Just take a look at the  intensity of            the fire that consumed the building but failed to bring it  down in the            following You Tube clip.
Now compare that with the  fires that            preceded the collapse of WTC 7.
How can any rational thinking  person            watch those two videos and lend any credence whatsoever to NIST's            claim that "thermal expansion" could have brought down            WTC 7 into its own footprint, whereas the dramatic inferno  that totally            consumed the Beijing building had little structural effect  whatsoever?
(ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW)
Apparently forgetting NIST's newly invented "thermal expansion" theory, a scientific discovery that presumably has replaced the laws of physics, this Chinese news correspondent stands perilously close to the building completely unaware that since 9/11, all buildings that suffer minor fires, never mind towering infernos such as this, must collapse within 7 seconds into their own footprint.
Here are another two clips for  comparison.
The dramatic flames engulfing  the Beijing            building, compared to the restricted "office fires" in WTC            7.
Here are four more images of  the Mandarin            Oriental Hotel ablaze and the aftermath.




Who could have guessed the  resulting            damage of the two fires? In Beijing....

And on 9/11....


9/11 truth debunking websites  have so            far been silent on the Mandarin Oriental Hotel fire and are  likely to            remain so. Yesterday's fire serves to reinforce facts and not  the fairy            tales that the official 9/11 story is based around - namely  that fire            cannot weaken or melt steel to the point where a building  collapses            at free fall speed into its own footprint, without the aid of  explosives.
 
 

 
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