The equation for free fall is pretty basic. Drop
anything—from a dime to a rock—from a tall
building, for example, and once that object hits
an acceleration of 9.8 meters per second squared,
it’s free falling. This equation applies to everything,
even to buildings.
In the fall of 2005, Brigham Young University professor Steven Jones presented this simple principle in a BYU campus auditorium packed with hundreds of people to illustrate how several of the World Trade Center towers fell too quickly on Sept. 11, 2001, to have only been hit by planes. To reach free-fall speed, Jones explained, the building’s floor supports would have needed to be blown apart. In other words, the carnage of 9/11 would have required another catalyst of destruction beyond hijacked planes—an explosive to cause the buildings to implode.
The discussion ran two hours and only ended because students began arriving for a class to be held in the room. Before concluding, Jones asked if anyone was not convinced more investigation was needed. Only one professor raised his hand. “And he tracked me down the next day on campus and told me I changed his mind,” Jones says.
Jones’ speech began his rise as an outspoken skeptic of
the official 9/11 report. But, it was also the beginning of the
end for his career as a college professor.
Jones and his colleagues theorized that a military-grade
explosive called nano-thermite sliced through the building
supports and brought down the buildings. Recently, they bolstered
their theory with analysis of a mysterious powder collected
from around New York City, a powder they asserted in the
April 2009 Open Chemical Physics Journal was nano-thermite.
If the theory sounds like bad science fiction, it is because a
similar explosive substance, “nanomite,” was used by Cobra (the
bad guys) in this summer’s over-the-top action movie, G.I. Joe: Rise
of Cobra. In the movie, Cobra uses nanomite to disintegrate buildings
and national monuments in a cloud of green dust.
Nano-thermite, however, is no green powder from comic
book fiction—it’s actually a red-chip substance that Jones and
his researchers have matched specifically to an explosive residue
using electron microscopy.
But before Jones recent red-chip research came to fruition, he
continued to speak frankly about other pieces of the puzzle: the
reported sounds of explosions on 9/11, molten steel at the site, steel
beams shooting out horizontally like missiles from the buildings,
and the sloppy federal explanations about what happened at World
Trade Center 7, the third building that collapsed and the only one that
did so without being hit by any planes.
Jones now casually rattles off the official testimony that claimed air defenses were called off and describes suspicious stock deals that netted mysterious individuals billions of dollars in profits from the 9/11 disaster.
“The problem in this
country is that we accept one conspiracy theory,” Jones says. “That it
was Al Qaeda—that’s the official conspiracy theory. OK, but it doesn’t
explain the lack of air defenses that day, it doesn’t explain why World
Trade Center 7 came down the way it did, and it doesn’t explain the
billions made off these extremely suspicious stock trades. So, there
really is a lot of evidence for foul play,” the professor says matter
of factly.
Beyond
the figures and formulas, perhaps Jones’ most incendiary conclusion is
that the explosions were the result of an inside job. Ironically, Jones
says his theory is supported by Occam’s razor: the principle that
states where there are multiple competing theories, the simplest one is
better. For Jones, the simplest theory is that the U.S. government
conspired to commit terror on its own citizens and kill thousands in
the process. The storm Jones has stirred up speaking out on 9/11
eventually forced him, in 2006, into early retirement from BYU.
Down but not out, the soft-spoken professor continues his controversial
research, having created a peerreviewed journal for multidisciplinary
9/11 research. He continues to call for a complete investigation into
the events of 9/11. Looking to explain this generation’s Day of Infamy,
Jones fights to retain his credibility while fending off criticism from
those more-or-less in his own camp for being dismissive of their 9/11
theories—laser beam attacks and holographic planes—all while
reconciling his faith with his own controversial work.
Some see the exiled BYU professor as the voice of dissent against the greatest cover-up in American history. Others see a reckless professor with a messiah complex, tilting at windmills that just aren’t there.







Jones is right on every point. Watch the videos of the demolition of building 7 at http://www.wtc7.net/videos.html -- and next time you visit Salt Lake City, stand at the base of the 19-story Church Office Building and ask yourself if a few floors were on fire is it possible for the entire building to suddenly collapse at near free-fall speed, resulting in two stories of pulverized ashes.
Building 7 was 47 stories. Had you stood on the roof and thrown a rock off the roof, it would have landed just a half a second quicker than the roof. That means that all 47 stories of reinforced steel and concrete offered just 1/2 of resistance. Is that possible without explosives?
Most people don't realize that free-fall is an acceleration, not a speed--roughly 32 feet per second, per second. The twin towers collapsed at just one second slower than free fall.
By the way, has anyone seen a semi-truck hit a stationary train head-on and then accelerate as it runs through every train car?
It will be interesting to see if Jones' LDS status will bring truth to more people in Utah.
Most Americans can't get past the concept of the government doing this to their own - if this were simply a dispassionate wargame, it would make perfect sense to sacrifice 3000 people to create a scenario where it was justified to go to war to control the resource that makes the US most vulnerable (oil).
The long term survival and continued dominance of the US for the next few hundred years would be far more important than a few civilian live. After all, the government has sent millions of people to their deaths in wars overs the years, so this trade-off would be one well worth taking.
All the neo-cons needed was something so shocking that it would become unpatriotic to question any subsequent course of action: the next Pearl Harbour.
Once you get your head around this, all the rest makes complete sense.
Most Americans can't get past the concept of the government doing this to their own - if this were simply a dispassionate war-game, it would make perfect sense to sacrifice 3000 people to create a scenario where it was justified to go to war to control the resource that makes the US most vulnerable (oil).
The long term survival and continued dominance of the US for the next few hundred years would be far more important than a few civilian lives. After all, the government has sent millions of people to their death in wars over the years, so this trade-off would be one well worth taking.
All the neo-cons needed was something so shocking that it would become unpatriotic to question any subsequent course of action: the next Pearl Harbour.
Once you get your head around this, all the rest makes complete sense.
Bravo Dr.Jones, a man who seeks the truth and finds it in the thermite evidence. Here is a man who was offered grant (bribe)money to keep his evidence from going public and threatened in e- mails. IMO Dr. Jones is a class act, we need more people(politicians)like him. Many people in Washington D.C. have this infomaton in thier hands. My question is what are they going to do about it? We're talking about treason here folks, plain and simple.