I am not calling you a liar but I do apologize for stating you were "making stuff up" (I have edited it out from my earlier messages).
I meant to state that what you and others call "molten steel" is not due to conventional heat, and likely isn't even steel; and doesn't even account for the towers turning to dust.
For example, AE911Truth makes the claim that an excavator was picking up "1200 degree C molten metal".
Temperatures anywhere near that hot would've permanently damaged the excavator and prevent it from operating. The hydraulic fluid in the excavator is designed to operate at room temperature and while even below water boiling temperatures would damage the entire system.
https://www.machinerylubrication.com/Read/772/hydraulic-equipment-reliability
Hydraulic fluid temperatures above 82°C (180ºF) damage most seal compounds and accelerate oil degradation. A single overtemperature event of sufficient magnitude can permanently damage all the seals in an entire hydraulic system, resulting in numerous leaks.
The by-products of thermal degradation of the oil (soft particles) can cause reliability problems such as valve-spool stiction and filter clogging.
Are you serious or just willfully ignorant?
Not everything that glows is hot. And regardless, a few pieces of glowing metal does not turn the towers into dust.