Malaysia Airlines Flight Goes Missing En Route to China

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:eople do NOT hijack aircraft for ideological, religious or political reasons and then NOT TELL ANYONE WHY. They just DONT!


ARE YOU COMPLETELY CERTAIN OF THAT AND WHY ARE YOU SHOUTING???


+1 I wonder if this is the same poster using CAPS ALL THE TIME?!


Reminds me a lot of the poster on this thread who was ranting and raving about people's lack of support for FCPS closures (see 10:26, 10:40, 10:44, etc, etc).

http://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/45/356929.page


That's pretty funny.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I think this is very likely a case of a pissed of pilot who was probably recently reprimanded. Highly doubt terrorism or malfunction in origin.

The Malaysian airlines is not very open, because they were probably the ones who issues some sort of reprimand.


So it was a suicide? Then why did he continue to fly the plane for another 7 years after dropping off radar? This doesn't make sense.


That should be hours, not years!
Anonymous
So if they can hijack a plane and "cloak" it so they can do whatever they want with it (use it like a weapon like 9/11) then we can't let any planes fly anywhere anymore.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:eople do NOT hijack aircraft for ideological, religious or political reasons and then NOT TELL ANYONE WHY. They just DONT!


ARE YOU COMPLETELY CERTAIN OF THAT AND WHY ARE YOU SHOUTING???


+1 I wonder if this is the same poster using CAPS ALL THE TIME?!


Reminds me a lot of the poster on this thread who was ranting and raving about people's lack of support for FCPS closures (see 10:26, 10:40, 10:44, etc, etc).

http://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/45/356929.page


Yes! I was thinking the same thing. She's Sanctimommy.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I think this is very likely a case of a pissed of pilot who was probably recently reprimanded. Highly doubt terrorism or malfunction in origin.

The Malaysian airlines is not very open, because they were probably the ones who issues some sort of reprimand.


So it was a suicide? Then why did he continue to fly the plane for another 7 years after dropping off radar? This doesn't make sense.


Maybe he was still debating things in his head. Do it, or don't do it? Also, if he was really angry, he must have known where to fly/crash the plane to REALLY thwart searchers. It seems like his maneuvering was done in a highly skilled manner, that not only was deliberate, but made intentionally difficult.

People who are really, seriously pissed off, don't care about the details - they often just care about winning. Evading not just radar tracking but being found, could easily be a revenge "win" against those he perceived as slighting him.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Finally - something new from the Daily Mail:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2581817/Doomed-airliner-pilot-political-fanatic-Hours-taking-control-flight-MH370-attended-trial-jailed-opposition-leader-sodomite.html


All this is wild speculation. Call me a doubting Thomas, but a pilot who has an elaborate flight simulator set up doesn't seem that odd to me. I'd like to think that pilots who want to do a good job go out of their way to practice. And a t-shirt? That's what we're basing this on? The plane could have been hijacked, but Mr. Shah could have been the first victim for all we know.


You can be upset about a verdict in a political case, yes, but for that to lead to mass murder seems a bit of a stretch! There are lots of people who are fanatical about politics, but I doubt if any of them would resort to murder/suicide if things didn't go their way! We'd see a lot more of this if that were the case.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I think this is very likely a case of a pissed of pilot who was probably recently reprimanded. Highly doubt terrorism or malfunction in origin.

The Malaysian airlines is not very open, because they were probably the ones who issues some sort of reprimand.


So it was a suicide? Then why did he continue to fly the plane for another 7 years after dropping off radar? This doesn't make sense.


Maybe he was still debating things in his head. Do it, or don't do it? Also, if he was really angry, he must have known where to fly/crash the plane to REALLY thwart searchers. It seems like his maneuvering was done in a highly skilled manner, that not only was deliberate, but made intentionally difficult.

People who are really, seriously pissed off, don't care about the details - they often just care about winning. Evading not just radar tracking but being found, could easily be a revenge "win" against those he perceived as slighting him.


What about the co-pilot?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I think this is very likely a case of a pissed of pilot who was probably recently reprimanded. Highly doubt terrorism or malfunction in origin.

The Malaysian airlines is not very open, because they were probably the ones who issues some sort of reprimand.


So it was a suicide? Then why did he continue to fly the plane for another 7 years after dropping off radar? This doesn't make sense.


Maybe he was still debating things in his head. Do it, or don't do it? Also, if he was really angry, he must have known where to fly/crash the plane to REALLY thwart searchers. It seems like his maneuvering was done in a highly skilled manner, that not only was deliberate, but made intentionally difficult.

People who are really, seriously pissed off, don't care about the details - they often just care about winning. Evading not just radar tracking but being found, could easily be a revenge "win" against those he perceived as slighting him.


What about the co-pilot?


I wondered about that too. I suppose he could have found an excuse to get the co-pilot out of the cockpit for a brief moment (asked a favor of him, etc.), then locked the cockpit.
Anonymous
Does anyone have a link that debunks the pilot's wife moving out the day before?

I could see the pilot's wife leaving because he was becoming increasingly erratic. Then the political arrest leads him to this.

Crazy people do crazy things; pilots have the ability to do it on a large scale.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have a link that debunks the pilot's wife moving out the day before?

I could see the pilot's wife leaving because he was becoming increasingly erratic. Then the political arrest leads him to this.

Crazy people do crazy things; pilots have the ability to do it on a large scale.

OMG, she is his EX-wife , not Wife
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I think this is very likely a case of a pissed of pilot who was probably recently reprimanded. Highly doubt terrorism or malfunction in origin.

The Malaysian airlines is not very open, because they were probably the ones who issues some sort of reprimand.


So it was a suicide? Then why did he continue to fly the plane for another 7 years after dropping off radar? This doesn't make sense.


Maybe he was still debating things in his head. Do it, or don't do it? Also, if he was really angry, he must have known where to fly/crash the plane to REALLY thwart searchers. It seems like his maneuvering was done in a highly skilled manner, that not only was deliberate, but made intentionally difficult.

People who are really, seriously pissed off, don't care about the details - they often just care about winning. Evading not just radar tracking but being found, could easily be a revenge "win" against those he perceived as slighting him.


What about the co-pilot?


The lead pilot was a long term veteran, and the co-pilot was very new. Seniority reigns I'm sure, and he could have coerced the co-pilot, threatened him, or taken sole control when the co-pilot went to the bathroom - as was the case on the Egypt Air crash.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have a link that debunks the pilot's wife moving out the day before?

I could see the pilot's wife leaving because he was becoming increasingly erratic. Then the political arrest leads him to this.

Crazy people do crazy things; pilots have the ability to do it on a large scale.


I could see them moving out because it was a planned hijacking and he wanted them out of harm's way once the sh** hit the fan.
Anonymous
Nah the moving out isn't true.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Koren airlines flight 007 .. was slightly off route due to inptting area in co-ordinates ... russia scrambled a fighter jet as it was off course in their air space, the commerical jet did not respond to the fighter jet as it did not see it due to ascending to a higher altitude to save on fuel the figher jet saw this as avaisive action and shot it down. russia firstly denied that its military had shot the passenger jet down and then admitted it, I cannot believe for one min that the malaysian military ignored this unidentified aircraft flying off course over their country and to me it seems all to similar to the russian incident. Maybe someone shot this plane down and now that they realize its a commercial plane, they will never reveal it


If they shot it down, there would be debris. This is an impossible scenario given the intense scrutiny of the area. Unless we've been fed a whole lot of lies....
Anonymous
So, Malaysia Airlines didn't notice its plane had gone missing for six hours? The plane didn't land in Beijing, so that's when someone noticed? The Daily Mail said it was reported missing more than six hours after the last contact with the plane at 1:07 a.m.
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