Perhaps a bit jaded, but I have my doubts this was an accident. Maybe it was. Likely it wasn't.
Perhaps a bit jaded, but I have my doubts this was an accident. Maybe it was. Likely it wasn't.
What if this whole crusade's a charade?
And behind it all there's a price to be paid
For the blood which we dine
Justified in the name of the holy and the divine…
Well it’s Baltimore so the local pilot for the ship was probably a DEI hire who wasn’t qualified.
True, but... Sully Sullenberger could've been the port pilot on that ship and it wouldn't have mattered. The thing had a complete power failure. Power goes down, so does guidance. Think no control. Just a couple seconds was all it took. Once something that big gets off course, it doesn't just stop or sharp turn. Like stopping one of your trains when a truck runs a crossing and gets stuck. Or trying to knife edge turn my 500,000+ pound jet. NOT going to happen.
When everything comes to light, I would just about guarantee the entire crew below deck were minimum wage, barely qualified foreign workers.
As for the name when the bridge is rebuilt... I'm betting on something like "John Lewis".
U.S. Army vet. -- Retired 25 year LEO.
If only we had a long metal road way that we could put on the water that you could drive over. Something like a ‘pier’…. You know, to reach across the water…. Where oh where could we find one…
The Second Amendment ACKNOWLEDGES our right to own and bear arms that are in common use that can be used for lawful purposes. The arms can be restricted ONLY if subject to historical analogue from the founding era or is dangerous (unsafe) AND unusual.
It's that simple.
Power failure looks to be a cause. But what caused the power failure? Poor maintenance and cyberattack seem like two candidates. So this could have been yet another instance of incompetence = disaster, or part of WW3, don't know yet.
Looks like the crew was just about all from India, although the captain may have been Ukrainian.
Indian sailors have a somewhat mixed record:
https://nationalinterest.org/blog/bu...n-hatch-166873
And I would bet the Indian Navy does better, on average, than a randomly assembled commercial ship crew working for whatever wages are paid on freighters.
Here's the deliberate attack concept in detail:
https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/202...sources-claim/
I don't know either way.
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