Message from @solarstan yt

Discord ID: 582342384868786176


2019-05-26 22:57:47 UTC  

Not inwards

2019-05-26 22:57:53 UTC  

Because the wreck is collapsing in itself

2019-05-26 22:58:03 UTC  

Prove it

2019-05-26 22:58:09 UTC  

Still waiting

2019-05-26 22:58:19 UTC  

Its under high water pressure and over 100 years old

2019-05-26 22:59:16 UTC  

Problem is, yes. It is protruding outwards. Actual dents made by icebergs don’t easily invert back outwards once they’ve been jammed inwards.

2019-05-26 22:59:16 UTC  

Show me a collapsing frame that goes from an inward indentation to an outward one, rather than continuing to buckle under the already compromised area of damage.

2019-05-26 22:59:33 UTC  

@🍄The Mad Philosopher🍄 that was never an inward indentation

2019-05-26 22:59:37 UTC  

That was undamaged

2019-05-26 22:59:44 UTC  

Then the wreck started collapsing

2019-05-26 22:59:46 UTC  

Are you daft?

2019-05-26 22:59:54 UTC  

The iceberg was on the outside

2019-05-26 22:59:57 UTC  

It's on a weld line

2019-05-26 23:00:01 UTC  

It hit from the outside

2019-05-26 23:00:08 UTC  

That was an undamaged part of the boat

2019-05-26 23:00:13 UTC  

Now it is tearing

2019-05-26 23:00:16 UTC  

Punctured **inwards**

2019-05-26 23:00:31 UTC  

The puncture of the ship is under the rocks

2019-05-26 23:00:32 UTC  

It looked like it happened after the iceberg

2019-05-26 23:00:33 UTC  

Now, it's magically outwards?

2019-05-26 23:00:43 UTC  

What you are seeing is a diffrent tear

2019-05-26 23:00:50 UTC  

Prove it

2019-05-26 23:00:54 UTC  

Still waiting

2019-05-26 23:00:55 UTC  

That tear has been caused since the titanic sunk

2019-05-26 23:01:06 UTC  

Nice theory. Sure.

2019-05-26 23:01:06 UTC  

Prove it

2019-05-26 23:01:18 UTC  

The iceberg collided beneth the waterline

2019-05-26 23:01:19 UTC  

You're pulling that out of your ass

2019-05-26 23:01:26 UTC  

That tear would be above the waterline

2019-05-26 23:01:31 UTC  

Again

2019-05-26 23:01:35 UTC  

Still pulling

2019-05-26 23:01:43 UTC  

Prove it

2019-05-26 23:01:52 UTC  

You're making a lot of assertions

2019-05-26 23:02:00 UTC  

Those anchors are still at full rise

2019-05-26 23:02:13 UTC  

And the holes are beneath them

2019-05-26 23:02:15 UTC  

No one has anchors at full rise beneth water

2019-05-26 23:02:25 UTC  

The anchors are on the same welding line as the tear

2019-05-26 23:02:29 UTC  

The holes are not that high

2019-05-26 23:02:44 UTC  

You had a tear circled in the picture

2019-05-26 23:02:55 UTC  

You're not following lines of perspective very well.

2019-05-26 23:03:16 UTC  

Go back to what you posted