Message from @{CAP}Radeon

Discord ID: 792646483274235914


2020-12-27 06:48:30 UTC  

They all have that devil look

2020-12-27 06:48:39 UTC  

oh i see what u mean

2020-12-27 06:48:52 UTC  

brb let me grab my tinfoil hat

2020-12-27 06:49:32 UTC  

So is this whyyou shared the bomb collar story?

2020-12-27 06:49:45 UTC  

Maybe it's just the one in Nashville

2020-12-27 06:50:11 UTC  

i recal tht pic ya

2020-12-27 06:50:22 UTC  

I still think itโ€™s funny he was worried about 5G spying on him ๐Ÿ˜‚

2020-12-27 06:50:32 UTC  

yea lol

2020-12-27 06:50:40 UTC  

he was the victim

2020-12-27 06:50:58 UTC  

bomb collar

2020-12-27 06:51:41 UTC  

I don't see how we just kept some explosives after he went out of business?

2020-12-27 06:51:53 UTC  

What's the guy actually that explosives dealer or did he deal in fireworks?

2020-12-27 06:52:04 UTC  

sounds like a John Grisham novel to me

2020-12-27 06:52:06 UTC  

Like if you do firework displays I think you got to have the same kind of license.

2020-12-27 06:52:23 UTC  

So saying the dude had an explosive license I mean that could mean a lot of things...

2020-12-27 06:52:24 UTC  

I'm assuming this is in response to the trade towers conspiracy... The steel used to construct the trade centers was A36 which is a low carbon steel that melts around 1450 degrees C. The maximum jet fuel burn temp for A1 and B1 types is ~825 C. So, it couldn't melt it. Now if you want to talk about structural integrity, A36 has a maximum strain measurement of 70 ksi at 200 c, and 23 ksi and 600 c. So it does loose a lot of it's structural integrity at 600-825 c. However, I think the question really is in the way the towers fell, not really in the burning temperature of the jet fuel...

2020-12-27 06:52:48 UTC  

You lose several hundred kilos of explosives...

2020-12-27 06:53:04 UTC  

my tinfoil hat is on so hard right now

2020-12-27 06:53:47 UTC  

They be like didn't this guy in Nashville lose several hundred kilograms of explosives less cross check his vehicles oh he has an RV just like the one in the picture.

2020-12-27 06:53:50 UTC  

how are all these companies conected.

2020-12-27 06:54:08 UTC  

He's a patsy...

2020-12-27 06:54:24 UTC  

Just an incestuous community of people who do government contracts.

2020-12-27 06:54:29 UTC  

And contract work

2020-12-27 06:54:30 UTC  

prolly

2020-12-27 06:54:42 UTC  

the AT&t building would have to be up to a military specification in order to handle any kind of military communications through it.

2020-12-27 06:54:53 UTC  

So it would make sense for people who understand those specifications to build design own such a building.

2020-12-27 06:55:00 UTC  

are you familiar with their hardware?

2020-12-27 06:55:10 UTC  

What hardware are we talking about?

2020-12-27 06:55:20 UTC  

ATT hardware that was in that building?

2020-12-27 06:55:32 UTC  

It's probably a bunch of routers dude...

2020-12-27 06:55:37 UTC  

(side note, have they said what type of explosive it was?)

2020-12-27 06:55:51 UTC  

That are connecting fiber that's running down the main backbone from Chicago to Atlanta through that location

2020-12-27 06:56:02 UTC  

And then there's another back haul that runs parallel to that particular fiber

2020-12-27 06:56:08 UTC  

Large transmission facilities like that don't use routers.. They use layer 3 switches.

2020-12-27 06:56:13 UTC  

The map has been previously uploaded

2020-12-27 06:59:05 UTC  

A layer 3 switches a router...

2020-12-27 06:59:10 UTC  

But whatever.

2020-12-27 06:59:46 UTC  

I have no idea what you guys are discussing.

2020-12-27 07:00:01 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/771201221145919499/792647962479951913/Screenshot_20201227-015949.png

2020-12-27 07:00:38 UTC  

IT stuff relating it to the bombing

2020-12-27 07:00:44 UTC  

So anyway there's a bunch of routers between fiber optic backbones