Where Did The Towers Go?
What do the physical facts say about the day on September 11, 2001? Was a directed-energy weapon used on 9/11? In the interviews, Dr. Judy Wood, the former professor of Mechanical Engineering at Clemson University, presents her case. The interviews are based on the professor’s book called Where Did the Towers Go? Evidence of Directed Free-energy Technology on 9/11.
Dr. Judy Wood discussed how the destruction of buildings in NYC on 9/11 was the result of directed energy technology, not planes, fire, thermite or bombs.
A directed-energy weapon (DEW) emits energy in an aimed direction without the means of a projectile, and some such weapons are real, whether people want to believe it or not. This technology is not science fiction. Nikola Tesla told the world about this technology a hundred years ago. Tesla was afraid that free energy technology would be used for evil purposes.
Dr. Judy Wood suggests the evidence supports that the behavior of atoms was unusual that day. She points the finger at no one and chooses to look at the empirical evidence only. Where did the towers go? What happened to the structures themselves? How did the buildings just turn to dust? How does science explain this phenomenon?
Huge models were tested by government agencies to recreate the event using higher temperatures. The tests became a problem because the steel did not melt. The final report was released on October 26, 2005, producing over 10,000 pages. It would not explain the actual collapse of the buildings.
It was determined that both buildings had asbestos and this presented a problem. Asbestos was outlawed in 1971. By 2001, it was estimated the cost to remove the asbestos was one billion dollars.
By 2006, 70% of the 40,000 ground zero workers had developed respiratory problems. Hundreds of them had developed cancer.
How do we explain the absence of the building materials? Dr. Wood says the book explains what really happened, instead of the fabricated stories that were projected subsequent to the disaster in New York.