How Did the Sphere Survive on 9/11?

in #911truth4 days ago

117d70b6-28b5-4d4a-9867-89bd7716f067_1024x1024.webp

Background of The Sphere

The Sphere is a cast bronze 20-25 ton sculpture created by Fritz Koenig, commissioned by the Port Authority and unveiled in 1971.

The Sphere is no small sculpture with a diameter of 20ft and a height of 25ft, including the base.

It stood directly in the centre of the Austin J Tobin Plaza in the middle of WTC 1 and 2, and was in the centre to symbolise the beating heart of the complex.

a599ba4e-ba5d-4b57-b964-e719d5e35e38_355x355.webp

What Should Have Happened on 9/11?

The Sphere with its position in the centre of the Plaza, in between WTC 1&2 was surely going to be destroyed. WTC 1&2 were placed either side and surely if 1,000,000 tons of building was supposed to have slammed to the ground it would be buried and damaged beyond repair.

What Actually Happened?

f33f1d48-1ea1-420f-b999-8f0579497132_355x355.webp

In the photos above and below, taken after the collapse of WTC 1 & 2, The Sphere is clearly sticking out from the debris pile. Although the sculpture wasn’t small in size, it should have been buried and destroyed.

8b89e91c-dad8-4268-91e3-2a3000e46840_179x282.webp

This is yet another piece of evidence, that supports Dr Wood’s explanation of the Twintowers turning to dust before they hit the ground.

Where is The Sphere Now?

The Sphere was removed from Ground Zero in March 2002 and placed in Battery Park in August 2002.

This is just one of many pieces of evidence presented in tne book Where Did The Towers Go? written by Dr Judy Wood.

a22dbb6e-d02b-47e6-8a5c-c29e61a04a3a_1862x1048.webp

As you can see in the photograph above the Sphere is still dented, still scarred but still recognisable.

The Sphere in 2017 was reinstalled near the new WTC. It is quite literally a memorial showing how absurd the ‘collapse’ narrative is.

This is just one of many pieces of evidence about 9/11 that was ignored but Dr Judy Wood presents in her book Where Did the Towers Go?

unnamed.jpg