Captain Raul Angulo's Big WTC 7 Problem NIST or NFPA Not Both!

2 years ago
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This 38-year veteran Seattle firefighter is in between a rock and hard place.

He's my guest on RichardGage911:UNLEASHED! - former firefighter Raul Angulo who is currently stirring up a hornets nest over at the National Fire Protection Association. I spent 3 days with him, firefighter Erik Lawyer, and the Boston 9/11 Truth volunteers at the National Fire Protection Association annual convention representing the Protecting All Protectors Alliance: https://ProtectingAll.org

We set up a WTC 7 evidence booth for the thousands of fire protection professionals, fire marshals, commissioners, and chiefs.
Learn more about our evidence booth at the Boston NFPA Convention:

https://richardgage911.org/papa-reveals-building-7-collapse-to-thousands-of-fire-professionals-at-boston-nfpa-convention/

Captain Angulo wrote the book Engine Company Fireground Operations. Along with the NFPA 1700 manual, it is THE standard for fighting fires in buildings - written FOR the National Fire Protection Association. So, they are now paying attention to him.

He has sent his own firefighters into burning skyscrapers in Seattle and has never had to worry about the buildings coming down on them - until now.

He's concerned that the 2008 NIST report on the Salomon Brothers building (WTC 7) presents firefighters quite the problem - because for the first time in history a skyscraper is claimed to have been brought down by... get this - normal office fires.

This has never happened before, or since. And he says, "there have been much hotter, larger, and longer lasting fires in these buildings". So there it is - staring us in the face, and "nobody in the industry is looking at it!"

The Salomon Brothers building presents a huge dichotomy for firefighters - and for the public who is told to wait in the burning building for the firefighters who need to get up uncrowded exit stairways to fight the fire.

Captain Angulo will present the dilemma to us - with all its ugly ramifications to the the building industry, the fire protection industry, to NIST, and especially to the NFPA.

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