We can use the FIU-Sweetwater UniversityCity Bridge Collapse to show how the logic applies to much more. I'm trying to avoid details that clutter the mind and distract from the broader application of understandings. We must see the bigger picture because the collapse of the building in Bangladesh carries similar lessons.
Natural Law 101
Nothing stays up in the air by itself just because you put it up and say it's going to stay up, unless:1. It is naturally supposed to stay in the air.
2. It is lighter than air.
3. It is in motion and has proper aerodynamics.
4. It is held up in the air by the air, water or ground.
5. You changed natural law. According to what I've read and watched about the UniversityCity Bridge Collapse, none of the above five conditions were met. This is as far as we need to go to understand why we must change our relationship to who and what we listen to as being “okay” and not okay.
Construction 101
1. Every material used in construction adds weight, which is okay, as long as the weight is supported.Supported means:
a. the material must be firmly attached and be able to remain firmly attached based on the conditions the structure will be exposed to. This means the material and the attachment method must fit the intended purpose without jeopardizing the integrity of the structure. Cost, speed and aesthetics are the last considerations and must never overrule any other consideration.
b. the material must be attached in a balanced fashion. (level, plumb, centered, etc.)
c. the constant force of all weight must continuously be able find its way to the ground without weakening the structure.
d. the weight of properly attached material should automatically have multiple routes to make it to the ground, thus, if any portion of the structure comes under stress, all of the weight would not be forced to pass through one location.
The more times you can form connections between construction materials, especially the frame, the stronger the structure. This is proven when using angled bracing and when floor joists, walls and roof rafters are cross-braced (blocked).
Here's another example: When I built my first shed, I did not put OSB pressboard on the walls. I jumped ahead and put in second story floor joists, which I could do from the first floor using a step ladder. This decision was made to try to quickly get up to the roof level and get the structure covered, then come back and cover the outside walls. Well, when I began putting down the second story flooring, the whole structure was swaying under my weight. Not a good feeling. I put on two panels then stopped. I went back and covered the first floor walls from top to bottom. Then when I went back up to finish the second story floor, the structure was solid and stable. I now understand that by covering the 2x4 walls with broad sheets of 4ftx8ft wood, I was forming a connection that connected multiple 2x4's, thus when weight was put on them from above, the weight was shared by all of the 2x4's at once, thus quickly and more evenly making it to the bottom floor, then to the foundation, then to the ground. It never pays to skip a step that strengthens a structure. Imagine building a one story 16 foot house using 16 foot pieces of wood to frame the floor and then only support the 16 foot lumber at the ends. We know the floor would sag in the middle, even when nothing is on it. As a result, even a person who has never built anything would realize they need to put something under the wood so the weight of the wood could be held up by the supports which would then be held up by the ground. Up to this stage, once this is done everything would be safe and sound.
Review
Natural law makes everyone pay for all violations.Construction 101 says the foundation must be capable of handling all weight of the entire structure and all weight that will be placed in the structure and all weight that will fall on the structure (usually rain and snow).
Secondly the bottom floor must be capable of handling all weight that is not below it.
Thirdly, the walls must be capable of handling all weight that is not below them.
Fourthly, the upper floor must be capable of handling all weight that is not below it.
Fifthly, the roof must be capable of handling all weight that is not below it. Construction 101 teaches you that once you place any weight on or in a structure, that weight is continuously putting pressure on the structure. This pressure never goes away, therefore, the pressure of the weight must be continuously transferred to the ground. If any portion of a structure is not supported sufficiently, then the pressure of weight will flow towards the weakest section because that portion is giving way and moving towards the ground, however slightly little by little, until over time, that less supported portion weakens enough, sags, cracks, snaps. For several Ages now, humans have been breaking optimal law and obeying suboptimal law. They have taken withdrawals out of hell to create false heavens. Now hell has to be paid.
All Emerald Cities and their laws will fall. (“cities” means societies, nations, countries or any sovereignty out of alignment with the rising of Aquaria and Kepheus) What took place in Florida was not about a bridge, but rather about a breakdown of obedience to natural law and natural order. Thinking you can outsmart natural law is a contagious cancer. This FIU bridge example gives us another warning before bigger collapses/failures happen in societies worldwide, such as in the food, water, electric, financial, and come-rescue-me systems. It has already happened in education and medicine, yet we just keep on going along. Any sane person who has built anything, will tell you, the FIU bridge was not properly supported. That's why it fell under its own weight due to natural law. No competent person builds anything over 8 feet without supporting it in the middle. The longer the structure the more supports are needed, evenly spaced across the entire length of the structure.
Based on the design drawings of the bridge, the finished bridge would have been supported in multiple locations. But the bridge was in an unfinished condition, therefore the weight from the middle of bridge had to travel a great distance before finding a route to the ground. Meanwhile, as this weight was moving across the floor of the structure, it was still constantly pushing downward. Finally, it found a weak connection which gave way a little bit more than other parts and then a little bit more and then the surrounding parts became stressed trying to compensate for the weak part and then it all fell apart in rapid succession.
Be certain to understand that even without the stress test taking place at the moment of collapse, that bridge would have likely collapsed in less than one month, because it is unlikely the main permanent support system would have been ready that soon. The stress test just accelerated inevitable failure. In other words the FIU bridge failed long before it was put into place due to a slew of stupid decisions. In the next message, we will explore more fully how such a decision could have been made to not put more temporary support under the bridge, and then on top of that, allow anyone to move under the bridge. If you have watched any plane crash investigation videos, you already know the answers are the same.* You can already see the same media behavior and you can already see the same behavior from those responsible. You can also see the same behavior from the public – shocked when they shouldn't be because Natural Law 101 and Construction 101 already told us this is what happens when you break the law.
*It usually boils down to a series of human errors, any of which, if they didn't happen, then the disaster would not have happened. It's time for us to use more of our God-given good sense so we can stop listening to the God-given bad sense in us, which causes us to listen to those who mean us no good.