Vixen
Penultimate Amazing
The visor probably wouldn’t even fit in junkshop’s living room.
It can be unassembled. It is just a series of panels.
The visor probably wouldn’t even fit in junkshop’s living room.
Simple ethics.
So, back to my question. You are a passenger on that stricken ship. Who do you sue: Russia 100% or are Sweden also vicariously liable for putting you in a position as a human shield?
It would probably be unwise inside the house due to the mess it makes, though considering the state of our living room, nobody would notice. But it would certainly work and welding steel does fundamentally mean melting steel at the joint, whether you accept it o not.
It can be unassembled. It is just a series of panels.
Their job was to certify it as 'seaworthy'. Having done so, the JAIC declared the vessel was seaworthy, when clearly it could not have been if the bow visor was ready to fall off as soon as a Baltic Sea wave slapped it.
Terrifying. Imagine if it had gone off.
Yeah. Who cares? Only a thousand or so members of public. <shrug>
So are you claiming the Clausthal-Zellerfeld do not know what they are talking about?
How would electronic equipment “go off”?
I doubt that that is something covered by H&S regs.
As far as civil liability is concerned, had the Russians previously sunk ferries on which their secrets were being smuggled?
It can be unassembled. It is just a series of panels.
There were two questions. Which is this in answer to, and what is your answer to the other?
It has the Russian signature written all over it.
Compare and contrast the Wilhelm Gustloff and the Estonia:
Yes, 'military material' uses 'public transport'
North Sea and cross channel ferries routinely carry military vehicles and personnel.
Do you think they charter a ro-ro ferry every time they want to move a few trucks?
So you are indeed guessing and Sweden were possibly not even the customer, merely an enabler.
And of course killing the smugglers would stop the smuggling. The western security services would have recruited the people in the best position to be able carry it out. Do you think there's an unlimited supply of desperate, suicidal smugglers at Smugglers R Us?
We were talking about whether the claim that 700° would be something that had taken place in an artificial situation such as a laboratory. You are claiming that a deformation compatible with that caused by an explosion can be created by simply getting yourself a welding kit and applying it to a piece of metal which could be in any old environment, hence the Clausthal-Zellerfeld lab/Brian Braidwood were patently incorrect.
I was paraphrasing, so seems all right to me. I am sure you could buy a welding kit from Argos and set about recreating the bow visor deformations seen but that doesn't cancel out the Clausthal-Zellerfeld observations.
It can be unassembled. It is just a series of panels.