Two Super Heroes That Too Few Know About
- added June 17, 2008
- 2 responses
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- cubbingabout
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Superheroes are big business in Hollywood now. Everywhere you turn, you see another so-called star play-acting the superhero role while millions of viewers flock to these inane flights of fantasy.
American moviegoers love Superman and Batman, Spiderman and Ironman. But not one of these well-muscled fantasy figures ever stood a thousand feet up, at the edge of the world stage, and bravely gave their lives for truth in the face of overwhelming evil.
You probably have never heard the names of either superhero. Hollywood does not inundate us with the names and faces of real heroes, only the fake ones. Yet you may know the two well, from what they SAID and what they DID on September 11, 2001.
They were eyewitnesses from the inside out.
Her name was Edna Cintron. What she did was defy danger and deny the validity of official, fraudulent, after-the-fact scientific theories.
According to these official apologists, among them American Society of Civil Engineers experts, Zdenek Bazant and Yong Zhou, Edna stood on the edge of red hot steel for the longest time. She stood upon or adjacent to 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit of radiant, conductive steel, if you believe these experts.
Yet Edna remains forever frozen in the famous photograph, her image forever poised at the brink, appearing calm although her fear must have been overpowering. She stood at the edge of an abyss, her arm grasping a wrecked window frame while her foot slips perilously close to space.
Befitting the moment, her image grows indistinct the more one tries to focus. She has been identified by her husband as Edna Cintron, who worked for Marsh & McLennan at the North Tower.
"Edna stood waving for rescue in the North Tower plane shape hole for at least 20 minutes," wrote Peggy Carter. "Her picture is in the NIST reports, waving to us, (revealing) that their tales of thousand degree heat from jet fuel is a lie. There is effort afoot to deny her reality and her valor."
A great lie, bolstered by the paid media and academia apologists, for the benefit of the plotters.
We see the doomed heroine standing there, minutes from death. Forthright in appearance, she appears almost delicate, like a curious child. Yet she must have been terrified. She must have been shocked. But mostly she must have been very brave.
American moviegoers love Superman and Batman, Spiderman and Ironman. But not one of these well-muscled fantasy figures ever stood a thousand feet up, at the edge of the world stage, and bravely gave their lives for truth in the face of overwhelming evil.
You probably have never heard the names of either superhero. Hollywood does not inundate us with the names and faces of real heroes, only the fake ones. Yet you may know the two well, from what they SAID and what they DID on September 11, 2001.
They were eyewitnesses from the inside out.
Her name was Edna Cintron. What she did was defy danger and deny the validity of official, fraudulent, after-the-fact scientific theories.
According to these official apologists, among them American Society of Civil Engineers experts, Zdenek Bazant and Yong Zhou, Edna stood on the edge of red hot steel for the longest time. She stood upon or adjacent to 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit of radiant, conductive steel, if you believe these experts.
Yet Edna remains forever frozen in the famous photograph, her image forever poised at the brink, appearing calm although her fear must have been overpowering. She stood at the edge of an abyss, her arm grasping a wrecked window frame while her foot slips perilously close to space.
Befitting the moment, her image grows indistinct the more one tries to focus. She has been identified by her husband as Edna Cintron, who worked for Marsh & McLennan at the North Tower.
"Edna stood waving for rescue in the North Tower plane shape hole for at least 20 minutes," wrote Peggy Carter. "Her picture is in the NIST reports, waving to us, (revealing) that their tales of thousand degree heat from jet fuel is a lie. There is effort afoot to deny her reality and her valor."
A great lie, bolstered by the paid media and academia apologists, for the benefit of the plotters.
We see the doomed heroine standing there, minutes from death. Forthright in appearance, she appears almost delicate, like a curious child. Yet she must have been terrified. She must have been shocked. But mostly she must have been very brave.
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- cubbingabout
- 2 months ago
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Pretty amazing, but I think because heat rises, the steel below would not be as hot as the steel above her. She is still a SuperHero, no matter how you look at it..
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- WorldPeaceTV
- 2 months ago
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"Edna stood waving for rescue in the North Tower plane shape hole for at least 20 minutes," wrote Peggy Carter. "Her picture is in the NIST reports, waving to us, (revealing) that their tales of thousand degree heat from jet fuel is a lie. There is effort afoot to deny her reality and her valor."
Truth.-
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- YourMothersMilk
- 2 months ago
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