FROM CBS News:
The new information given to Malaysia’s government and forwarded to searchers in Australia shows “potential objects” in the same part of the ocean where satellite images previously released by Australia and China showed objects that could be debris from the plane, Malaysia’s Ministry of Transport said in a statement without providing further details.
Wooden pallets and straps are integral to 99% of maritime commerce, but that won’t stop the usual suspects from leaping on this “evidence” to feed yet another round of lunacy.
Yeh thats the ticket. :-)
Doesn’t sound very pallet-able to me.
I would love to know how a pallet, which is made of wood held together by nails, could survive a 500 mph crash when the rest of the plane did not.
Hey, I found a pallet behind my garage! Maybe it went down in my backyard?
They might be better off searching for the pilot’s life insurance policies and finding out who the beneficiaries are???
Well in this case maybe: SNAIL OR FROG.
NEWS FLASH! We have no facts,and now for the latest speculation ....
Keeps us searching for MH370 in a place where it is not.
Wooden Pallets..yeah that’s something common you see on a plane..maybe they will find the SS Minnow while their at it
but...but... Some crazy ex military clown says the plane was taken to Pakistan?!?
thanks seekandfind!
All y’all, see posts #2, 24, 26,35,and 36 about shipping containers used in the planes; they use aluminum ones.
If wooden pallets are found in that debris, its not from the plane..
The info keeps changing daily. I’m half way expecting the Maylaysian government to announce the plane never took off.
The news media doesn’t have access to Google? Amazing what a 3 second web search finds:
http://www.boeing.com/assets/pdf/commercial/startup/pdf/CargoPalletsContainers.pdf
I have now seen the “aviation experts” on CNN change their “professional and expert analysis” half a dozen times in 16 days. People are seriously getting paid off this b.s. and it is ridiculous watching the histrionics of CNN around the clock with every piece of garbage found on satellite or floating in seaweed.