Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
Lookng at the pentagon (or the plane from the back) I mean the right one.
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That’s what I was hoping for.
The right engine stuck both a light pole on the road, and the generator outside of the pentagon. There are too many additional forces to calculate exactly where the engine would go, and just because it missed the window does not mean the plane does not exist.
If you were unaware, the generator was the cause of the huge explosion seen on the video at the impact, not just the airplane, it’s the generator.
Please watch the video in the article I posted a few times ago:
http://www.pentagonresearch.com/lamps.html
Further more, here is a new video I found of an f4 fighter slamming into a reinforced concrete wall at 500 mph, the wall is designed to move back to absorbed some of the forces, if it had not the plane and wall would have suffered more damage:
http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/IM...er_impact2.wmv
When a light aluminum plane hits a solid wall, it gets smashed to bits.