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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Not everything would sink. Seat cushions float, plastics from/in the plane, small luggage, shoes, clothing, blankets,/pillows....None of this was ever found. [/quote] Over 200 pieces were found in Mozambique and Madagascar beaches …[/quote] By the one free lance white guy? All those professionals that couldn’t figure out where to look and couldn’t find a single thing but the one guy just shows up after some internet sleuthing and finds unmarked pieces of the plan. Yeah right. [/quote] By coincidence we were staying at Mozambique beach where the guy started looking in 2015 and the beaches were covered in flotsam and junk. It probably just looked liked more of the same until someone knew what to look for. [/quote] How would all the "official" searchers not look there?[/quote] They were still looking in the Indian Ocean for two years [/quote] [b]But Indiana Jones figured out just the right place to look and zero of the professional searchers could come up with the same info. [/b][/quote] Still wrong. The very first piece was found by locals. Then this guy got all interested, talked to oceanography experts (as you call them, the "professionals", and they told him where to look. And he did. Countries didn't have endless budgets to just beachcomb thousands of miles. They were looking where they think the plane went down, to find the plane, maybe the black box. [/quote] And the oceanographers actually predicted debris would start washing up at places like Réunion Island before it started to wash up, based on the estimated crash site region and ocean currents.[/quote] But no one else thought to look there but Indiana Jones ? Instead there countries decided to focus on the areas where they were finding nothing. Got it. [/quote] This is a remote and violent part of the southern Indian Ocean. Have you seen the footage of the large search boats tackling the giant waves? Mission impossible. Not only Indiana Gibson but many others found many debris. PP is correct that oceanographers predicted they would wash up on south East African beaches and islands in the Indian Ocean - and many did.[/quote] Just because people find debris, does not mean it's been authenticated. I feel like you all are trolling at this point. 3 pieces have been confirmed, though only one was with absolute certainty. Of course, we haven't found any personal artifacts floating around. Other debris has been considered "highly likely" but have you asked yourself why there isn't some kind of trail of debris? It's been nine years now. Yes, the sea is rough, but they could not find the plan in the exact location that inmarsat data led them to, which is the point where the plane would have run out of gas. [/quote] Official searchers from the most expensive multinational naval search in history have confirmed 20 pieces of debris as either cartainly or highly likely from MH 370 - within 3 years of the plane going missing. Other evidence is that the pilot simulated the same unlikely path a month before. It is not a commercial route to fly an hour from KL towards Beijing over the South China Sea and then just before hitting Vietnamese airspace turning westward through Malaysia before turning south. There is no other explanation for why he would be practicing such a bizarre flight path if not to carry out this suicide mass murder mission. [b]His wife and children left him the day before the incident and he had expressed distress about his family imploding. The motive was there.[/b] He had the skills and experience to carry out this terrible act. His copilot did not have the experience or qualifications to challenge his decisions. The debris started washing up where oceanographers predicted it would. [/quote] Where was this reported? No where I've seen...[/quote] Missing Malaysia Airlines pilot 'terribly upset' by marriage break-up March 26, 2014 Sydney Morning Herald https://amp.smh.com.au/world/missing-malaysia-airlines-pilot-terribly-upset-by-marriage-breakup-20140326-zqn4p.html As search crews continue to scour the Indian Ocean for any signs of the missing Malaysia Airlines jet, questions once again have been raised about the veteran pilot at the controls of MH370 and his state of mind at the time of the flight. A reporter from the New Zealand Herald has filed a story from Kuala Lumpur claiming to have spoken to one of Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah's friends, a fellow pilot, who said the 52-year-old was going through a number of relationship problems and felt that his life was crumbling at the time of the ill-fated flight on March 8. … The friend claimed that Captain Zaharie was "terribly upset" when his wife, Faizah Khan, told him she was leaving. The couple have three children and, although they had separated, had been living in the same Kuala Lumpur house. The friend also claimed that Captain Zaharie was experiencing relationship problems with another woman he was seeing. >>>>>> 'SELF DESTRUCT MODE' Married MH370 pilot, 53, bombarded model twins with 97 creepy messages before doomed flight vanished https://www.thescottishsun.co.uk/news/3249313/married-mh370-pilot-53-bombarded-instagram-model-twins-with-97-creepy-messages/amp/ * By Jon Lockett * Published: 10:38, 19 Jun 2019Updated: 11:29, 19 Jun 2019 >>>>> WHAT REALLY HAPPENED TO MALAYSIA’S MISSING AIRPLANE Five years ago, the flight vanished into the Indian Ocean. Officials on land know more about why than they dare to say. By William Langewiesche JULY 2019 ISSUE https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/toc/2019/07/ William Langewiesche, a former national correspondent for The Atlantic and a professional pilot, has written about subjects including aviation, national security, and North Africa. According to William Langewiesche, writing in The Atlantic, Shah incapacitated or killed his co-pilot, took control of the plane, depressurized the cabin to kill everyone on board, then steered the Boeing 777 out to sea where he either waited for it to run out of fuel, or deliberately nose-dived it into the ocean. A combination of radar data, expert analysis and educated conjecture points to the conclusion that Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah was a troubled, lonely man who deliberately killed all 238 passengers and crew on board the Malaysian Airlines flight. >>>>>>> Disturbing MH370 theory: ‘Sad and lonely’ pilot may have meant to crash https://thenewdaily.com.au/news/world/2019/06/18/mh370-pilot-suicide/amp/ While pilot suicides are rare, they do happen. It is understood that Zaharie was experiencing a marriage breakdown at the time and was described by some who knew him as “often lonely and sad”. His wife had moved out and was living in the family’s second house. One of Zaharie’s friends, a fellow 777 captain, told Mr Langewiesche that he had reluctantly come to the conclusion that Zaharie was guilty.[/quote]
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