Here is a metaphor of what happened on 9-11 a decade and a bit ago so that everyone can understand the shear absurdity of what the 9-11 commission put forward as the official story.
For those of you who do not know, Jet Fuel is Kerosene (the stuff you use in camp stoves) with some additives to make it resistant to exploding.
The official story of 9-11 is similar to a group of Boy Scouts having a sleep over at a park and setting up a ColemanĀ® Stove on a concrete park table. And because they are boys, they are a little inattentive and there dinner starts burning. And then, the next thing you know the table, stove and dinner completely disintegrate leaving a coating of dust all over the park.
After that, a joint committee of park rangers all get together and state that this was obviously caused by the food getting to hot because of the presence of kerosene which caused the structure of the table to collapse.
Every boy scout master knows that the worst that can happen is the boys pour kerosene all over the table (in their boyish attempt at filling the fuel canister) and it goes up in a puff of flame. Leaving a blackened table and some kids singed a bit.
Kerosene, aka Jet fuel, doesn't burn hot enough for steel and concrete to even care.
If it did, camp stoves the world over would be known as very dangerous items that could, at any fuel spill, be reduced to a puddle.
Further, even if it did, the cast iron skillet should still be in one piece, as it has sat on top of a kerosene flame its entire life, so it should still be there. And where is the pieces of the table or the melted stove?
At the site of the twin towers, there was almost nothing left. None of the huge steel beams that held up the structure for decades was anywhere to be seen. There was no jet engines (which spent their entire life doused in burning jet fuel), not even any pieces of them. There was only a some of the external steel plating and a few of the tiny beams used to support the floors.
The entire building had just vanished. Apparently turned to dust and spread all over Manhattan.