JayUtah
Penultimate Amazing
Saying something sounded like an explosion is not a simile.
You need a comparative.
Would it be too much trouble for you to answer my questions without constant deflection?
Saying something sounded like an explosion is not a simile.
You need a comparative.
In Paul Barney's mind as of the point in time he felt the crash that woke him up. When he realised it could not have been a rock - later, on reflection - because the ship had not yet reached the archipelago who knows what thoughts crossed his mind, as we are not told.
Ah, so we don't takes his first impression literally.
What about collisions? If they say they hit something, does respect require that we believe them?
And explosions? If they say they heard an explosion, must we conclude there was an explosion?
Or, if we're allowed to say the reports of explosions were really collisions (or vice-versa), then how are you respecting the survivors than those who say the noises of the storm and visor damage is what they really heard?
I have no idea whether there were explosives or not. All I know is that some survivors claim to have heard explosions - in fact a series of them...
Saying something sounded like an explosion is not a simile.
If you scroll back a few messages dated today, you will see a summary of the statements, which you can quickly add up for yourself.
Look, chatting with your mates in a coffee shop is very different from survivors just pulled out of the water and questioned by police anxious to get their witness statements. Your mates can give it large and you can merrily disbelieve half of what they say. In the aftermath of a catastrophe someone saying it felt like a collision really isn't trying to ******** you. Honest!
I'm interested only in English translations. I don't know where this site got these statements from, but I sure wish they had made them searchable.
Which ones mention explosions? Which ones collisions? I guess you haven't read them all, but list those you know who mention one or the other, please. Thanks.
Sillaste, Treu and Linde, I am afraid, were put under very great pressure by the police and by the investigators, being interviewed over and over again over several years and unfortunately their stories changed over time to fit the JAIC narrative. Linde in particular is not a credible witness IMV so I can't believe anything he says.
I could be wrong but I suspect they would keep the doors and windows closed during a storm.
And thanks to my job location I have heard more than 30 car accidents and witnessed 12. Not one sounded like an explosion. Most sounded like the old steel trash can/bins being thrown off a roof.
As for this:
I don't see a description of an explosion, I see a description of large wave hitting a ship whose hood is - by this man's own words - already loose on its hinges.
You cited testimony and evidence alleging that there were, and tried to tell us all about metallurgy in order to convince us that this evidence was worth considering.
Which you choose to take literally, whereas other witness testimony you say can be interpreted less strictly.
In order to do that, they must have been of a type he recognized and which others with similar experience would also recognize. What type were they? Were they odorless explosives?
You say from your vast experience as a forensic investigator.
And that deformation analysis was consistent with several things, but they reported only one of them. Remember how you tried to lecture us about metallurgy and had your head handed to you?
Sound enough for you to deploy a knee-jerk rebuttal suggesting that some kind of odorless explosive was used, in order to preclude any witnesses reporting a strange smell. The motte-and-bailey strategy grows tedious. You either know enough to know whether the explosives some say were used could have been odorless, or you don't.
Who?
A quick glance at this site, where they summarize the sounds heard per witness testimony, doesn't show any examples. Obviously, that site may be incomplete and you know something they omit, but who claimed to hear explosions?
Perhaps we can see the English translation of that testimony and see.
Again, help me out here. You say people heard an explosion or collision, but you haven't given me much in the way of evidence.
One guy heard a scraping underneath, but that's not obviously a collision. Another said she thought they hit a rock at the time. Anyone else say they heard a collision? And which ones heard explosions?
Thanks.
The difference between them is purely rhetorical and not linguistic. Saying that there are no similes in Finnish is like saying that there is no such thing as hyperbole in Finnish.
This thread moves quickly. Can you at least tell me which post?
Is it the same source as I cited just above? If so, the answer is: no one. The page I cited listed no one claiming they heard an explosion. The only occurrence of the word "explosion" was a denial that a person heard one.
Of course, that site may be biased and you may have other information, so let me know.
Um, that's nice.
I repeat my question again to see if you can muster an answer to it.
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Ah, so we don't takes his first impression literally.
What about collisions? If they say they hit something, does respect require that we believe them?
And explosions? If they say they heard an explosion, must we conclude there was an explosion?
Or, if we're allowed to say the reports of explosions were really collisions (or vice-versa), then how are you respecting the survivors than those who say the noises of the storm and visor damage is what they really heard?
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In sum, do you believe that BOTH explosions and a collision occurred, or are you disrespecting survivors?
His statement as summarised is here. You decide whether 'a hard push' is a good translation of what he said.
So no real ethos of taking eyewitness testimony seriously, then.
Do you have any evidence for this "very great pressure" you mention? I mean, the fact that they were interviewed numerous times *could* suggest they were subjected to pressure, but does not necessarily.
Can this pressure be demonstrated to exist any place other than your own supposition, or in the uncorroborated claims of such people as Anders Bjorkman?
I'm no expert in Swedish, but if your referring to "kraftig stöt", then "hard push" seems viable, if a bit underdramatic. Maybe "powerful shock"? But that still doesn't imply an explosion.
Bjorkman thinks Linde was fitted up for his drug conviction.
I believe Linde was a properly convicted drug smuggler. He got nine years. The Finnish prosecutor wanted him to get eleven years. Linde conspired to smuggle 13 kilograms of amphetamines. He claimed his contacts with the truck driver of this cargo was merely to chat about building work. He claimed he was fitted up because of the Estonia. This is the same guy who claims he was at Turku Hospital with 'missing surivor' Vhadras, was a frined of his and they chatted. Linde says he Linde left the room for a few moments and when he came back, Vhadras had vanished, together with his bed. His body was washed up drowned later. Linde admitted he completely changed his initial statements to the JAIC re the Estonia sinking. He changed his story more times than jackanory. The guy is a compulsive liar, like most criminals. If you believe anything Linde says, you are gullible. Yet Linde was the JAIC's star witness.
As I recall the deformation in the metal samples cut from the bow bulkhead were compatible with an explosive force, because of the pattern of twinning. This can also be caused in a laboratory by heating metal up to >700°. Since it had not been laboratory treated, this hypothesis was rejected. Three independent laboratories confirmed deformation compatible with a force of up to between 3,000 to 5,000 m/s.