Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To be fair, how will we ever know what caused the Titanic to sink if we don’t study the site of the wreckage?
Are you kidding? What caused it to sink is not obscure. It hit an iceberg and filled with water. This is not, um, rocket science.
So, you think there is nothing to be learned from a tragedy like that? No design flaws? Or engineering mistakes? To prevent it from happening again?
Lesson - when a sailor says "ICEBERG ahead" the captain should make attempts to avoid it - not ignore the sailor. This has been proven by many many accounts.
Anonymous wrote:The debris discovered within the search area near the Titanic wreck is from the missing submersible, the US Coast Guard has confirmed. They found the tailcone.
Anonymous wrote:What were those banging sounds ?? Was hoping it was them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To be fair, how will we ever know what caused the Titanic to sink if we don’t study the site of the wreckage?
Are you kidding? What caused it to sink is not obscure. It hit an iceberg and filled with water. This is not, um, rocket science.
So, you think there is nothing to be learned from a tragedy like that? No design flaws? Or engineering mistakes? To prevent it from happening again?
How many ships have sunk in a similar manner to the Titanic in the past 111 years?
Anonymous wrote:What were those banging sounds ?? Was hoping it was them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To be fair, how will we ever know what caused the Titanic to sink if we don’t study the site of the wreckage?
Are you kidding? What caused it to sink is not obscure. It hit an iceberg and filled with water. This is not, um, rocket science.
So, you think there is nothing to be learned from a tragedy like that? No design flaws? Or engineering mistakes? To prevent it from happening again?
Those lessons were already learned. The only thing you can learn now is maybe the effect of the ocean on a decomposing ship. But even then everyone knows what the outcome will be.
Meh, until Titanic was found they didn't know for sure if it had broken in half or not. Everything wasn't already known.
By the time the wreck was found and explored, there was nothing to be learned that would improve safety now. Perhaps had more been known in the years immediately following the sinking, that info might have been useful then but things have progressed beyond the point it would matter now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To be fair, how will we ever know what caused the Titanic to sink if we don’t study the site of the wreckage?
Are you kidding? What caused it to sink is not obscure. It hit an iceberg and filled with water. This is not, um, rocket science.
So, you think there is nothing to be learned from a tragedy like that? No design flaws? Or engineering mistakes? To prevent it from happening again?
Those lessons were already learned. The only thing you can learn now is maybe the effect of the ocean on a decomposing ship. But even then everyone knows what the outcome will be.
Meh, until Titanic was found they didn't know for sure if it had broken in half or not. Everything wasn't already known.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To be fair, how will we ever know what caused the Titanic to sink if we don’t study the site of the wreckage?
Are you kidding? What caused it to sink is not obscure. It hit an iceberg and filled with water. This is not, um, rocket science.
So, you think there is nothing to be learned from a tragedy like that? No design flaws? Or engineering mistakes? To prevent it from happening again?
How many ships have sunk in a similar manner to the Titanic in the past 111 years?