Cheesebooger

Kike website

pby1000

LOL. So, disregard the theory? Come on, man, those are sharks.

Cheesebooger

I knew from the beginning that there's something very strange about the whole MH370 flight. Israel owns the sister plane. Many, many other crazy things. GLP is a known shekel shithole.

NonsenseAbounds

My favorite theory is how the Rothschilds inherited some patent because all 3 patent owners were on that flight

pby1000

Yes, I heard that, too. It would not surprise me considering what they did to the Titanic.

NonsenseAbounds

I have not heard that one, lol

pby1000

Search for "rothschilds sank the titanic" and a lot of references will come up.

I choose to believe it is true.

Sullysq

Nice idea. But if his timing is counting on the bodies sinking because they were buckled into their seats then floating after 2-3 weeks then it won't work. Because aren't the seats supposed to float?

Sure if the seats were still in the fuselage they would sink with the plane. But then they would stay sunken despite the bodies becoming more buoyant from rot. They would still be stuck in the fuselage after all.

pby1000

I think the plane probably broke up when hitting the water. I seriously doubt it somehow landed on the water, and then sunk intact. Even if it did land on the water, I think the fuselage would at least crack. The ocean surface is not smooth at all.

Remember this?

https://youtu.be/KCuh_2M4o3A?t=270

Sullysq

Well yeah. That's a very likely scenario right there. The fuselage was most likely not intact. And the old dood they talk to in that video talks about waking up bobbing in the water floating on his seat. Then he sees his wife to his left bobbing in the water floating on her seat. It wouldn't take 2-3 weeks for the people to float to the surface if they were strapped in their seats like the theory suggests. Even if they weren't strapped in their seats they would float right away in ocean water. That's why he suggested that the seats would drag them down until they became more buoyant, except the seats wouldn't sink to drag them down in the first place.

pby1000

Do you suppose the plane made a somewhat controlled landing in the water? If it hit with enough force, then there would just be pieces of everything floating around, including people. I have read that the seat belt can bisect a passenger...

It is just fascinating that those two sharks remained under water for over 60 days, then they were both detected at the surface in the same general area for a number of days in a row.

Sullysq

Oh! Another thing to maybe consider is surface current patterns. If the plane crashed further away, sank, but bodies and debris floated then what floated would drift. Possibly to the area the sharks were found. Trace back from the shark location 2-3 weeks of drifting along current flows and that may be a more likely crash location. This assumes there was still enough floating after that time to draw the sharks' attention.

pby1000

Yes, exactly. There are websites that track the ocean currents, but I have not had time to investigate this in too much detail. I looked quickly and saw that there are two currents that converge at this location. One current comes from the north and the other current comes from the north east.

https://weather.com/news/news/indian-ocean-currents-mh370-debris-plane

Sullysq

In any case I suspect bodies would be floating much sooner than 2-3 weeks after the crash. Seats or no seats, whole or dismembered, they would float in the salt water. That alone blows this theory away due to timing. The only way they would not float right away would also prevent them from floating at all. That is if they remained in the sunken plane.

The shark thing is interesting though. Could've been feeding on anything really. As a separate issue it would be interesting to learn more about their feeding habits, social structure, and then work out what else may have drawn them to that area at that time. I do know they navigate their migration patterns via magnetic fields. Not that that has anything to do with planes crashing but it's something little known and interesting about sharks.

pby1000

Shark Tracking Website:

http://www.ocearch.org/

Is there a website that simulates the currents of the Indian Ocean?

What Indian Ocean Currents Tell Us About Possible MH370 Debris:

https://weather.com/news/news/indian-ocean-currents-mh370-debris-plane

vivalad

your link to the shark tracking website has kept me entertained on and off for the better part of the day.

interesting that those 2 sharks with different swim patterns ended up following the the same path before their pingers died. not sure that it has anything to due with MH370 - warm water currents may have attracted them to the same area as a hungry whale. cool theory, though

pby1000

Yes, that is a very cool website. I have been on it, too.

There is another one that tracks ships.

https://www.marinetraffic.com/