Posted on 06/22/2023 12:40:10 PM PDT by Red Badger
From another post: The bad news is that all passengers have perished. The good news is that they died instantly.
They all died in a homemade submarine, a homemade submarine, a homemade submarine....
More good news...there were no “50 year old white men” amongst the dead....
The US Coast Guard need to ask if the US Navy’s extensive underwater hydrophone network in the North Atlantic heard the implosion of the submersible. That way, they can determine when the submersible imploded during its fatal dive.
Without question, this is the most implosive news story of the year.
👍🤦♂️............................
“More good news...there were no “50 year old white men” amongst the dead....“
Nor to be held responsible either!
Too Soon!
(Snicker)
The Navy would not tell, nor would the Coast Guard ask............But, I can tell you they, the Navy, knew from the beginning it was gone. That’s why they dragged their feet to not send any ships of search equipment.................
“Without question, this is the most implosive news story of the year.”
That wins some kind of award just not sure what.
From descriptions of it, it seems this private submarine craft had one very small, obviously very thick, window - and viewing of the Titanic basically could only be done on monitors using video cameras.
In that sense, what’s the point of going down there, anyway? the same “experience” could be had sitting on a ship, viewing the video feed of a submersible drone.
I asked the same question. $250k and ten hours in a cigar tube for this?.....................
I knew it imploded. It was a suicide mission.
the gallows humor punny award.
Most of us did as well.
The clues were all over...............
They all died in a homemade submarine, a homemade submarine, a homemade submarine....
LOL
Can we stop spending government money on these decadent idiots now?
The SOSUS network was declassified in 1992, and has been (most likely) partially decommissioned in recent years. But much of the hardware still remains operational, hence my suggestion that the US Navy may have detected the sound of the submersible’s demise, especially only several hundred miles off the Canadian coast.
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