Interview Transcript : Tony Szamboti : On NIST's 9/11 Sins of Omission

Interview with Tony Szamboti
Transcript published 23 May 2016
URL: http://themindrenewed.com/transcripts/884-int-067t

For this important interview we welcome Tony Szamboti, mechanical engineer and 9/11 researcher, who joins us for a detailed discussion on crucial evidence that, in the words of his research group, "clearly demonstrate(s) that the reports produced by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) on the destruction of the World Trade Center (WTC) were unscientific and fraudulent."

With the group's white paper as our focus, "Areas of Specific Concern in the NIST WTC Reports" which lists 25 Points seriously challenging NIST's work in this area, we discuss striking new evidence demonstrating that NIST intentionally omitted significant structural components from its analysis of Building 7, and explore the almost inescapable conclusion that this was done in order to avoid the explanation of controlled demolition. We also discuss the potential these findings might have for legal action.

(Tony Szamboti is a U.S. Navy Veteran, he holds a Bachelor's degree in Mechanical Engineering from Villanova University, and has worked predominantly in the Aerospace industry for the last 28 years.)

Thanks for this

It's very useful to have transcripts of audio/video in which much of value is said. Must have taken you a while to do, and the pictures in amongst the text are a nice touch as well.

Wow! The interview covers a lot of ground. - Layman like me.

INTERVIEW - http://themindrenewed.com/transcripts/884-int-067t
I agree on the graphics. The graphics really help to digest aspects, plus Tony tries to relay information on a very understandable level. It helps a layman like me.
The interview covers a lot of ground, from Silverstein's lost TV episode to William Pepper to 9/11 to NIST to Ghandi.

(90 seconds) William Pepper
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jAk9AdnYm68

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Little Actions we all can do -

Tony says it very well...

The other thing: Mahatma Ghandi said something I thought was quite appropriate for the average person. He said... no matter how insignificant you believe what you can do is, it’s important that you do it, because a lot of little actions finally create large actions.

FREE FALL sais it all.

The number of times i've lost printouts/plans/images...

This is an excellent spread sheet.

Thanks for transcript and to Mr Szamboti for tireless integral delivery of fact.