Malaysia Airlines Flight Goes Missing En Route to China

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe it’s been 9 years and the plane still hasn’t been found. I remember being glued to the TV when this happened. It feels like just yesterday. RIP. I feel so bad for the families who lost loved ones and have no closure.


Yes. Is anyone watching the Netflix series on this that went live this week? The theories are absolutely insane! I don't know what to believe.


I watched all three episodes and what stood out to me is that officially the pilot was no longer being blamed. There is no explanation for this plane disappearing.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe it’s been 9 years and the plane still hasn’t been found. I remember being glued to the TV when this happened. It feels like just yesterday. RIP. I feel so bad for the families who lost loved ones and have no closure.


Yes. Is anyone watching the Netflix series on this that went live this week? The theories are absolutely insane! I don't know what to believe.


I watched all three episodes and what stood out to me is that officially the pilot was no longer being blamed. There is no explanation for this plane disappearing.

Geo engineering?
Anonymous
Was any pieces of wreckage ever recovered?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Was any pieces of wreckage ever recovered?


Yes small pieces, but nothing substantial
Anonymous
I just watched the documentary and was riveted by this story when it first happened. I guess the part I can’t wrap my head around is how did none of the passengers place a call to their families. Even if the pilot locked himself in the cockpit and was depressurizing the cabin, there would have been time for someone, anyone to place a call. Even the flight attendant could have called the airline like they did on 9/11. That part baffles me. 239 people on board and not one person raised the alarm that something was amiss. This is why I’m beginning to believe the missile theory because the incident had to have been instantaneous and catastrophic. And If he veered off course as the satellite data suggest how did no one pick a rogue plane up in their airspace? That was something I hadn’t thought about before but it makes sense—someone would have noticed something on radar even if he turned off communications with controllers. The case is just utterly fascinating. How can we lose a 777?!?
Anonymous
End of first episode was essentially RUSSIA DID IT!. Typical Netflix - documentary became political and is meant to drum up more support for financing Ukraine
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I just watched the documentary and was riveted by this story when it first happened. I guess the part I can’t wrap my head around is how did none of the passengers place a call to their families. Even if the pilot locked himself in the cockpit and was depressurizing the cabin, there would have been time for someone, anyone to place a call. Even the flight attendant could have called the airline like they did on 9/11. That part baffles me. 239 people on board and not one person raised the alarm that something was amiss. This is why I’m beginning to believe the missile theory because the incident had to have been instantaneous and catastrophic. And If he veered off course as the satellite data suggest how did no one pick a rogue plane up in their airspace? That was something I hadn’t thought about before but it makes sense—someone would have noticed something on radar even if he turned off communications with controllers. The case is just utterly fascinating. How can we lose a 777?!?


https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_of_useful_consciousness

35,000 ft is typical for a cruising altitude.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:End of first episode was essentially RUSSIA DID IT!. Typical Netflix - documentary became political and is meant to drum up more support for financing Ukraine


You must agree:

Russia is evil and devious. They are an enemy of the United States.

Everyone knows that.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I just watched the documentary and was riveted by this story when it first happened. I guess the part I can’t wrap my head around is how did none of the passengers place a call to their families. Even if the pilot locked himself in the cockpit and was depressurizing the cabin, there would have been time for someone, anyone to place a call. Even the flight attendant could have called the airline like they did on 9/11. That part baffles me. 239 people on board and not one person raised the alarm that something was amiss. This is why I’m beginning to believe the missile theory because the incident had to have been instantaneous and catastrophic. And If he veered off course as the satellite data suggest how did no one pick a rogue plane up in their airspace? That was something I hadn’t thought about before but it makes sense—someone would have noticed something on radar even if he turned off communications with controllers. The case is just utterly fascinating. How can we lose a 777?!?


https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_of_useful_consciousness

35,000 ft is typical for a cruising altitude.


So they’d have 30 seconds to make a call
Anonymous
Didn’t they say some of the families got calls? I thought I heard that on the first episode.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I just watched the documentary and was riveted by this story when it first happened. I guess the part I can’t wrap my head around is how did none of the passengers place a call to their families. Even if the pilot locked himself in the cockpit and was depressurizing the cabin, there would have been time for someone, anyone to place a call. Even the flight attendant could have called the airline like they did on 9/11. That part baffles me. 239 people on board and not one person raised the alarm that something was amiss. This is why I’m beginning to believe the missile theory because the incident had to have been instantaneous and catastrophic. And If he veered off course as the satellite data suggest how did no one pick a rogue plane up in their airspace? That was something I hadn’t thought about before but it makes sense—someone would have noticed something on radar even if he turned off communications with controllers. The case is just utterly fascinating. How can we lose a 777?!?


https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_of_useful_consciousness

35,000 ft is typical for a cruising altitude.


So they’d have 30 seconds to make a call


Assuming the cellphone "tower" in the plane is still running. There aren't any cellphone towers at 35,000 ft.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Didn’t they say some of the families got calls? I thought I heard that on the first episode.


Families were calling loved ones cellphones and hearing rings. They believed that this was indicative of a working cellphone at the other end of the call. Cellphones aren't landlines though.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I just watched the documentary and was riveted by this story when it first happened. I guess the part I can’t wrap my head around is how did none of the passengers place a call to their families. Even if the pilot locked himself in the cockpit and was depressurizing the cabin, there would have been time for someone, anyone to place a call. Even the flight attendant could have called the airline like they did on 9/11. That part baffles me. 239 people on board and not one person raised the alarm that something was amiss. This is why I’m beginning to believe the missile theory because the incident had to have been instantaneous and catastrophic. And If he veered off course as the satellite data suggest how did no one pick a rogue plane up in their airspace? That was something I hadn’t thought about before but it makes sense—someone would have noticed something on radar even if he turned off communications with controllers. The case is just utterly fascinating. How can we lose a 777?!?


https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_of_useful_consciousness

35,000 ft is typical for a cruising altitude.


So they’d have 30 seconds to make a call


If they realized what was happening and had time to find and turn on their phone. That isn't much time.
Anonymous
Me, clicking on the link in the first post, not realizing this thread from 2014: Omg, Malaysia didn't retire that flight number?!?!?!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I just watched the documentary and was riveted by this story when it first happened. I guess the part I can’t wrap my head around is how did none of the passengers place a call to their families. Even if the pilot locked himself in the cockpit and was depressurizing the cabin, there would have been time for someone, anyone to place a call. Even the flight attendant could have called the airline like they did on 9/11. That part baffles me. 239 people on board and not one person raised the alarm that something was amiss. This is why I’m beginning to believe the missile theory because the incident had to have been instantaneous and catastrophic. And If he veered off course as the satellite data suggest how did no one pick a rogue plane up in their airspace? That was something I hadn’t thought about before but it makes sense—someone would have noticed something on radar even if he turned off communications with controllers. The case is just utterly fascinating. How can we lose a 777?!?


If there was a missile how do you explain the satellite data?

And the pilot could have given a cover story to explain anything unusual. “Stay seated, turbulence ahead”. It may have thrown off flight attendants just long enough. Regular cell wouldn’t work up there.
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