whoanellie
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Apr 4, 2012
- Messages
- 1,471
Where did I say my ideas were correct?
If you don't have any confidence in the validity of you ideas, why would anyone else?
Where did I say my ideas were correct?
Sorry but my belief that Dr Loftus' theories have nothing or little to do with this incident is not defamation. Her theory is...
If the ship was stopped it would be stopped.
What could stop it 'momentarily'?
What do you think the inertia of a 15,000 ton ship moving at around 15 knots is?
Not that it matters because certain other posters don't do math, but the kinetic energy of Estonia at the time of the accident was 578MJ.
If a 5,000 ton sub hit the Estonia and stopped it, the sub would have had to be travelling at around 55km/h pretty much on the surface in bad weather.
If the imaginary sub was a 1,000 ton minisub, it was doing 122km/h on the surface in bad weather
People with knowledge in this area can spot a couple of problems pretty quickly...
What 'consensus' is that?
Her sister ship sailed for many years with no problems.
What exactly made the Titanic unseaworthy?
Germany hasn't signed the Treaty? Nor has it prosecuted its German citizens visiting the site. Why is the opinion of survivors and the Estonian former chief prosecutor 'irresponsible speculation'? What is it you abhor about the survivors' eyewitness accounts? These guys had to watch as their fellow passengers/crew died in front of them, only to discover their witness statements count for zippo, when we should be grateful that at least someone survived to relate to the world an historical event of what happened as it happened.
Eyewitness testimony must be reconciled with other evidence. You can't simply pretend physics doesn't exist just so you can feel righteously in solidarity with survivors.
Ovberg was very exact and precise. He said 'momentarily' stopped. Now when there is a collision in which you are stopped albeit momentarily, that indicates something has impeded your path. For example a sleeping policeman when driving along a road. And if it is a head-on collision of course you will stop or be flung backwards or sideways.
Carl-Eric Reintamm saw something moving away through the water. The Finnish Police were interested enough in his account to pay a visit to Estonia to specifically ask him what he saw.
The JAIC rewrote his statement to say he saw 'some broken off stair rails'.
So maybe you now have a sense of why the survivors are dissatisfied with the report and their accounts being treated as worthless or rephrased to fit the JAIC narrative.
Somebody needs to take 9th grade physics.
Exactly. It's like the express train which hits a fly. It momentarily stops then moves off again. That's common sense physics right there.No no.... I know that whenever I drive over a sleeping policeman, my car momentarily comes to a stop, before moving off again very shortly thereafter.
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Somebody needs to take 9th grade physics.
No no.... I know that whenever I drive over a sleeping policeman, my car momentarily comes to a stop, before moving off again very shortly thereafter.
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That's now how things work in this case.
Witness statements are taken, key points are plotted along a time-line, and a narrative is constructed. These statements are balanced by physical evidence.
The report didn't "rewrite his statement" though, did it? That's just disingenuous.
The report took note of his statement, then sought inferences/explanations which both a) feasibly accounted for his stated experience and (importantly) b) feasibly matched with all of the known reliable evidence (and lack of evidence).
How do you know that?
"Håkan Bergmark, 41, from Stockholm was one of the first who dived down to the "Estonia". He says that he saw and filmed a big hole in the side of the ship. He did not consider it much at the time. 'It wasn't my task to find the cause of accident. But when the Final Report of the Commission was issued many years later I was very surprised', says Bergmark, who today would like to forget all about the "Estonia". Two of the four other divers, who were down together with Bergmark, do not want to comment on the "Estonia" at all."
Fredrik Engström, Swedish daily Expressen 22 August 2000
Early in the morning of September 28, 1994, the phone rang at the home of the diver Håkan Bergmark, a reserve officer in the navy. It is the navy's rescue service on Muskö that asks him to be prepared to step in as a diver at short notice due to the Estonia disaster.
He does not hear anything for a number of days, but when he talks to other diving colleagues, he realizes that they have also received the same order to be on standby. Bergmark's military career began in the late 1970s with an 18-month diving training under the auspices of the navy. He eventually became associated with KSI, the Office of Special Collection, an organization under MUST, Sweden's military intelligence service. KSI was previously called SSI, the Section for Special Collection, which in turn was a successor to IB, a long-unknown intelligence activity in Sweden that had a close connection to the Social Democratic Party.
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Håkan Bergmark sees two dead people during his dives, the other divers see significantly more. In the sea waters of northern Europe, there may sometimes be mines from the Second World War, but this hole had not been made by an explosion from the outside, the hole had instead exploded from the inside and out. Bergmark's personal experience of the hole in the hull is that a bomb exploded on the car deck and that this explosion sank the ship. His firm belief is that it is about sabotage.
He has a hard time saying how big the hole is, as it is difficult to get an overview due to the poor visibility, but it is quite possible for him to get through the hole with the diving equipment on.
It is estimated that it is an elongated hole, 4-5 meters long. Håkan Bergmark and the other divers also hear conversations on deck where it is suggested that those responsible will never tell the truth.
"No external damage has been observed to the wreck, except those on the visor and in the area around the bow ramp." (Accident report, 8.5.1, page 120).
Do bravery and courage make one better at sensing whether a ship has stopped? I get that the report indicates he was thrown forward. But he's inside a cabin in a ship at sea in a storm at night. He has no reference. No way to tell if the ship has stopped.
I hear subs start to shimmy really badly around 90km/h.
Where have you ever admitted you were wrong? You told your critics they were "deluded" if they didn't accept the conspiracy theory you were presenting.
You are making allegations of fact. Labeling them opinion doesn't change their essential nature.
And when that basis is questioned you strenuously defend your position. Again, don't debate and then pretend you aren't debating after you get stuck.
If you don't have any confidence in the validity of you ideas, why would anyone else?