Source: Original Site Post

  • WTC: Please Don’t Be Stupid in my Presence

    September 13th, 2018 7:13 PM WTC
    Please don’t dork on my wall. Not to be too nerdy, but WTC failed at weakest point: holding the floors to the center and perimeter. so it only had to heat the weakest point on one floor sufficiently to lose half its strength and the weight of the stack did the rest. Pancaking is a very common method of architectural failure and is the principle reason for collapse after exterior wall failure, and foundation failure. In other words, buildings tilt and fall, or collapse and pancake depending upon whether it is built as a honeycomb (apartments) or a stack (office building). There are MANY regulations in place during the construction of buildings precisely because pancaking is so dangerous during the process. Particularly with buildings that jack the floors into place. There have been calls in the past for prohibiting the practice. I don’t know how common it is today. But it appears that most floors are poured in place today. WTC was designed with less masonry, more exterior and core columns, with no midpoint columns, but long spans of floor braces covered with concrete. This meant that floor pressure bearing on the joint between column and floor was not distributed across as many columns by short runs but concentrated in core and edge by long runs. These points only had to soften enough to lose 50% of their carrying capacity. When that happened, the floor sank, exterior columns bowed, and the pressure of the floors above just used gravity and momentum to overload each set of floors below it. Thus pancaking. The MIT report is correct – I cannot find any fault with it. I can however attest to the … dunning kruger effect of everyone who disagrees with it. ======UPDATE=== The building was designed to be light. The columns were box-columns of decreasing thickness with height.
    The diagram attached helps understand that the building was constructed out of TUBES, like building something out of straws. This is why there are huge pieces of the exterior still standing, because unlike most buildings, the exterior was structural. The pictures of the wreckages show the columns as sheet steel. The attached photo shows the I-beam that connected the box columns and a box column it’s attached to. Heck, just looking at the floor plan shows the tubular structure of the building. ====== UPDATE ==== You don’t understand. I don’t make mistakes. It’s my job. From the Journal of Materials and Metallurgy
    Thomas W. Eagar, the Thomas Lord Professor of Materials Engineering and Engineering Systems
    MIT, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Room 4-136, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139-4301; Eagar was the author of the “steel didn’t melt” findings. The NIST Report is online, and makes the same argument. Heat, buckle, break, pressure, collapse. Eyewitnesses reported that one or more floors ‘in the nineties’ had collapsed. Eyewitnesses reported the buckling of the exterior (Structural) walls. We were all witness to the pancaking. Damage > Burn > Break > Buckle > Squish > Pancake. Buildings tilt from foundations and cause buckling, buckle from exterior damage and pull the structure over, pancake from weight above, and on occasion all three. But as in all things: —“the tendency of all solids when heated is increase in plasticity”– —“The tendency of a rock is to fall straight down”.— —“The tendency of the dim to overestimate their competency is infinite”— Please don’t be stupid in my presence. Policing the informational commons is a moral obligation of all men, and stomping on intellectual bunnies is tedious and not an honorable use of time.

  • September 13th, 2018 8:09 AM [V]ery minor decreases in human selection pressure

    September 13th, 2018 8:09 AM

    [V]ery minor decreases in human selection pressure produce very large increases in dysgenia.

  • September 13th, 2018 1:22 AM by Joseph Smith —“the cognitively deficient essen

    September 13th, 2018 1:22 AM by Joseph Smith

    —“the cognitively deficient essentially unionize to overrule the dictates of the market and natural law if the capable and productive are going to allow it. If we’re totally separating morality out of it and ignoring how cancerous and destructive it is for the world and humanity as a whole, they do actively profit more so by envy and its accompanying precepts than by honest effort. Many actually don’t possess the mental tools. To tell them to just be smarter/more productive would be like telling you to be taller. They’re legitimately limited by genetics, operating on the signals and incentives available to them to gather the most resources and political influence possible under their present circumstances. I used to think they were lazy…but based on all the evidence I can surmise that they’re fundamentally limited and scared, thrashing about like a drowning man for a life jacket. We allowed the course of nature to be subverted for too long, there shouldn’t be this many and we’re headed towards a market correction on that.”—-

  • September 20th, 2018 7:55 AM CONFLATION. WE CAN’T HELP IT. HENCE OPERATIONALISM.

    September 20th, 2018 7:55 AM CONFLATION. WE CAN’T HELP IT. HENCE OPERATIONALISM. —“Ontological confusions:
    Both children and adults tend to confuse aspects of reality
    (i.e., “core knowledge”) in systematic ways (Lindeman,
    Svedholm-Hakkinen & Lipsanen, 2015). Any category mistake
    involving property differences between animate and
    inanimate or mental and physical, as examples, constitutes
    an ontological confusion. Consider the belief that prayers
    have the capacity to heal (i.e., spiritual healing). Such
    beliefs are taken to result from conflation of mental phenomenon,which are subjective and immaterial, and physicalphenomenon, which are objective and material (Lindeman,Svedholm-Hakkinen & Lipsanen, 2015). On a dual-processview, ontological confusions constitute a failure to reflecton and inhibit such intuitive ontological confusions (Svedholm& Lindeman, 2013). Ontological confusions may also be supported by a bias toward believing the literal truth of
    statements. Thus, ontological confusions are conceptually
    related to both detection and response bias as mechanisms
    that may underlie bullshit receptivity. As such, the propensity
    to endorse ontological confusions should be linked to
    higher levels of bullshit receptivity.”—

  • WTC: Please Don’t Be Stupid in my Presence

    September 13th, 2018 7:13 PM WTC
    Please don’t dork on my wall. Not to be too nerdy, but WTC failed at weakest point: holding the floors to the center and perimeter. so it only had to heat the weakest point on one floor sufficiently to lose half its strength and the weight of the stack did the rest. Pancaking is a very common method of architectural failure and is the principle reason for collapse after exterior wall failure, and foundation failure. In other words, buildings tilt and fall, or collapse and pancake depending upon whether it is built as a honeycomb (apartments) or a stack (office building). There are MANY regulations in place during the construction of buildings precisely because pancaking is so dangerous during the process. Particularly with buildings that jack the floors into place. There have been calls in the past for prohibiting the practice. I don’t know how common it is today. But it appears that most floors are poured in place today. WTC was designed with less masonry, more exterior and core columns, with no midpoint columns, but long spans of floor braces covered with concrete. This meant that floor pressure bearing on the joint between column and floor was not distributed across as many columns by short runs but concentrated in core and edge by long runs. These points only had to soften enough to lose 50% of their carrying capacity. When that happened, the floor sank, exterior columns bowed, and the pressure of the floors above just used gravity and momentum to overload each set of floors below it. Thus pancaking. The MIT report is correct – I cannot find any fault with it. I can however attest to the … dunning kruger effect of everyone who disagrees with it. ======UPDATE=== The building was designed to be light. The columns were box-columns of decreasing thickness with height.
    The diagram attached helps understand that the building was constructed out of TUBES, like building something out of straws. This is why there are huge pieces of the exterior still standing, because unlike most buildings, the exterior was structural. The pictures of the wreckages show the columns as sheet steel. The attached photo shows the I-beam that connected the box columns and a box column it’s attached to. Heck, just looking at the floor plan shows the tubular structure of the building. ====== UPDATE ==== You don’t understand. I don’t make mistakes. It’s my job. From the Journal of Materials and Metallurgy
    Thomas W. Eagar, the Thomas Lord Professor of Materials Engineering and Engineering Systems
    MIT, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Room 4-136, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139-4301; Eagar was the author of the “steel didn’t melt” findings. The NIST Report is online, and makes the same argument. Heat, buckle, break, pressure, collapse. Eyewitnesses reported that one or more floors ‘in the nineties’ had collapsed. Eyewitnesses reported the buckling of the exterior (Structural) walls. We were all witness to the pancaking. Damage > Burn > Break > Buckle > Squish > Pancake. Buildings tilt from foundations and cause buckling, buckle from exterior damage and pull the structure over, pancake from weight above, and on occasion all three. But as in all things: —“the tendency of all solids when heated is increase in plasticity”– —“The tendency of a rock is to fall straight down”.— —“The tendency of the dim to overestimate their competency is infinite”— Please don’t be stupid in my presence. Policing the informational commons is a moral obligation of all men, and stomping on intellectual bunnies is tedious and not an honorable use of time.

  • September 13th, 2018 8:09 AM [V]ery minor decreases in human selection pressure

    September 13th, 2018 8:09 AM

    [V]ery minor decreases in human selection pressure produce very large increases in dysgenia.

  • September 13th, 2018 1:22 AM by Joseph Smith —“the cognitively deficient essen

    September 13th, 2018 1:22 AM by Joseph Smith

    —“the cognitively deficient essentially unionize to overrule the dictates of the market and natural law if the capable and productive are going to allow it. If we’re totally separating morality out of it and ignoring how cancerous and destructive it is for the world and humanity as a whole, they do actively profit more so by envy and its accompanying precepts than by honest effort. Many actually don’t possess the mental tools. To tell them to just be smarter/more productive would be like telling you to be taller. They’re legitimately limited by genetics, operating on the signals and incentives available to them to gather the most resources and political influence possible under their present circumstances. I used to think they were lazy…but based on all the evidence I can surmise that they’re fundamentally limited and scared, thrashing about like a drowning man for a life jacket. We allowed the course of nature to be subverted for too long, there shouldn’t be this many and we’re headed towards a market correction on that.”—-

  • September 12th, 2018 6:14 PM by Skye Stewart Dig a little most lefties don’t int

    September 12th, 2018 6:14 PM by Skye Stewart

    Dig a little most lefties don’t intuitively grasp Econ 101. So rich people qualitatively are those who have taken from others. Of course, opponents, forgetting there is no ‘pure’free market, often forget many rich people have their positions due precisely to unearned political rents to some degree. So some naturally get pissed off when they see economic inequality, and are sometimes wrong in their assumptions about its causal nature, while others do not get pissed off though they should be since it was unearned, at least economically.

  • September 12th, 2018 5:19 PM by Skye Stewart [T]he french originated socialism a

    September 12th, 2018 5:19 PM by Skye Stewart [T]he french originated socialism as national socialism. Both Marx’s international communism and international socialism are, in a sense ‘national socialism’ made international. Many on the alt-right and many conservatives who want to venerate their people and provide for them, all loathe to spread the benefits too far. But it’s the same sentiments involved. 1) Conservatives ‘narrow the circle’ to nationalism. 2) Lefties just expand the circle. 3) Vegans and Jainists push the circle further to include all sentient life. In that sense the difference is only in ‘who pays and how much?’.

  • I Don’t Empathize with the Leftist Mind

    September 12th, 2018 3:52 PM [I] just don’t understand the envy of the leftist mind. I mean, I am not tall enough to play major sports, or run a fortune 500 company for that matter. I have a touch of autism that prevents me from doing many things. I’ve been severely ill for large parts of my life. But I never really envy anyone other than the ordinary middle class guy who finds entertainment and joy in life’s simple pleasures, family and friends. I mean I looked up to people and tried to imitate them. I tried to learn from many people. I worked far harder than most people can imagine. But envy? What is wrong with the ‘equalitarian’ mind?