Anonymous wrote:I and a few dozen of my friends have marked ourselves safe here. Facebook prompted us because we live near the bridge and we clicked safe or not affected.
Why? Some of us who are middle aged, connect with a lot of friends from past periods of life on Facebook. I have FB friends from middle school and high school in another state. I have friends from college in another state. I have friends from work in another state. And I have family and friends who have relocated to other parts of the country who know I lived relatively close to that bridge. I've been asked a lot by FB friends if I have been affected or my commute has been affected by the bridge. Marking myself as unaffected by the event, just cuts down on the number of inquiries I get from far away friends, especially friends who have never lived in this area.
It's not for attention seeking or internet popularity (neither applies for me and my group of friends).
Anonymous wrote:I have to agree with the earlier PP--are cargo ships normally piled this high? this one looks like it has a very high pile of cargo on it and how is that even secured? I can imagine things shifting or moving as this ship hits waves out at sea.
Anonymous wrote:I and a few dozen of my friends have marked ourselves safe here. Facebook prompted us because we live near the bridge and we clicked safe or not affected.
Why? Some of us who are middle aged, connect with a lot of friends from past periods of life on Facebook. I have FB friends from middle school and high school in another state. I have friends from college in another state. I have friends from work in another state. And I have family and friends who have relocated to other parts of the country who know I lived relatively close to that bridge. I've been asked a lot by FB friends if I have been affected or my commute has been affected by the bridge. Marking myself as unaffected by the event, just cuts down on the number of inquiries I get from far away friends, especially friends who have never lived in this area.
It's not for attention seeking or internet popularity (neither applies for me and my group of friends).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have to agree with the earlier PP--are cargo ships normally piled this high? this one looks like it has a very high pile of cargo on it and how is that even secured? I can imagine things shifting or moving as this ship hits waves out at sea.
This is really not that hard to find out on the interwebs.
They are piled very high. They are topheavy. They have things figured out about going into the ocean. They've been doing it for years. You can unload that ship in hours, not days. That's the beauty(?) of containers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They need to set up a ferry for locals. Something like within X miles of the bridge and only provide it for locals.
I cant imagine living in Sparrows Point and commuting to Glen Burnie for work and then your 20 min commute turns into 1.5 hours. Or vice versa. The surrounding areas are mostly working class and cannot afford this- in time or in funds.
I am somewhat familiar with both of these areas. I just did a Google map search and it would take 35 minutes using the Ft McHenry tunnell. It's not great but it's not 1.5 hours.
Anonymous wrote:Forgive me if this was already asked, but how do cargo ships typically pass through/by the bridge? Do they usually go under, and this ship hit the pylon instead? I do not think there is a drawbridge. That ship seemed piled high with cargo. It doesn't look like it would have fit going under the bridge.
Anonymous wrote:Forgive me if this was already asked, but how do cargo ships typically pass through/by the bridge? Do they usually go under, and this ship hit the pylon instead? I do not think there is a drawbridge. That ship seemed piled high with cargo. It doesn't look like it would have fit going under the bridge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are people marking themselves safe from the bridge collapse on FB?
The media quickly quantified the limited number of victims.
It’s the worst kind of attention seeking.
To be fair, it’s probably easier than answering countless texts from friends/family who know little beyond “key bridge in Baltimore collapses.”
It happened in the middle of the night during the work week (not weekend), and the people I see doing it are older white women who don’t live anywhere near the bridge and wouldn’t be out that late at night. It’s so weird.
It’s a gross joke. The “marked safe from X” has been a joke on FB for years. Anyone doing that after this tragedy would be unfriended and cut from my life.
I don’t know anyone doing this, and I have a number of family and friends who live in the Baltimore area. Maybe you run in an attention-seeking circle?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are people marking themselves safe from the bridge collapse on FB?
The media quickly quantified the limited number of victims.
It’s the worst kind of attention seeking.
To be fair, it’s probably easier than answering countless texts from friends/family who know little beyond “key bridge in Baltimore collapses.”
It happened in the middle of the night during the work week (not weekend), and the people I see doing it are older white women who don’t live anywhere near the bridge and wouldn’t be out that late at night. It’s so weird.
It’s a gross joke. The “marked safe from X” has been a joke on FB for years. Anyone doing that after this tragedy would be unfriended and cut from my life.
I don’t know anyone doing this, and I have a number of family and friends who live in the Baltimore area. Maybe you run in an attention-seeking circle?
Me either. Literally none. Stop with the invented drama.
Anonymous wrote:I have to agree with the earlier PP--are cargo ships normally piled this high? this one looks like it has a very high pile of cargo on it and how is that even secured? I can imagine things shifting or moving as this ship hits waves out at sea.
Anonymous wrote:I have to agree with the earlier PP--are cargo ships normally piled this high? this one looks like it has a very high pile of cargo on it and how is that even secured? I can imagine things shifting or moving as this ship hits waves out at sea.
Anonymous wrote:I have to agree with the earlier PP--are cargo ships normally piled this high? this one looks like it has a very high pile of cargo on it and how is that even secured? I can imagine things shifting or moving as this ship hits waves out at sea.
Anonymous wrote:I think people have a very hard time accepting the fact that there are sometimes tragic situations in which you will likely die and be unable to save your loved ones.
Anonymous wrote:Forgive me if this was already asked, but how do cargo ships typically pass through/by the bridge? Do they usually go under, and this ship hit the pylon instead? I do not think there is a drawbridge. That ship seemed piled high with cargo. It doesn't look like it would have fit going under the bridge.