17 | WTC Collapse Theories with Richard Gage

17 | WTC Collapse Theories with Richard Gage

From Theorists Theorizing by Big Theory Podcasts

December 1, 2025 · 1h 35m

About this episode

Richard Gage discusses the structural failures and controversies surrounding the collapse of 7 World Trade Center during the 9/11 attacks.

Richardgage911.org Richard Gage discusses the significant structural failures that occurred during the 9/11 attacks, focusing on the rapid removal of steel from the site and the implications of this action on forensic investigations. Far from the chaos of the Twin Towers, tucked quietly into the Manhattan skyline, stood a building that would fall not with an explosion of spectacle, but with a whisper that still echoes through the decades. No plane struck it. No dramatic impact churned its steel. And yet, as dusk approached on September 11th, it collapsed in a smooth, uncanny descent that has haunted experts and observers ever since. Official reports insist it was a fire and structural compromise. But to many, the fall feels too symmetrical, too sudden, too silent. The unanswered questions linger like ghosts in the dust. Tonight, we are joined by Richard Gage, a man whose investigations into the engineering, physics, and eerie inconsistencies of that day have placed him at the crossroads of controversy and conviction. With blueprints, data, and decades of scrutiny behind him, he returns to the haunting puzzle that refuses to be laid to rest. This case file, join the Theorists as…

People in this episode

Host: Big Theory Podcasts

Guest: Richard Gage

Topics covered

  • 9/11
  • structural failures
  • forensic investigations
  • World Trade Center
  • controversy
  • engineering
  • physics

Keywords

  • WTC Collapse
  • Richard Gage
  • 9/11
  • structural integrity
  • forensic analysis
  • engineering
  • controversy

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: Richardgage911.org

Places: Manhattan

More episodes of Theorists Theorizing

Explore listener stats, chart rankings, contacts and more on the Theorists Theorizing podcast page.