Message from @Human Sheeple
Discord ID: 582321648255107072
mark my words
FACT: The Captain, Edward Smith, was one of the most decorated Captains of his time and it would have been totally out of character for him to avoid precautions.
Dude they are way better then real people
Mr. ROWE. About three-quarters of a mile, sir.
Senator BURTON. Did you see her go down?
Mr. ROWE. I saw her stern disappear at the finish, sir.
Senator BURTON. It was while she was still floating that you heard the explosions?
Mr. ROWE. Heard this rumbling sound, sir.
Senator BURTON. You are quite sure of that, are you?
Mr. ROWE. Positive, sir.
They don't get stupid drink and drive text and drive don't get tired
Alfred Olliver, Quartermaster in Lifeboat 5
Quartermaster Oliver states he did not see the sinking clearly, but thought she had broke apart:
Pages 530 and 531:
Senator BURTON. Did you see the boat sink?
Mr. OLLIVER. I can not say that I saw it right plain; but to my imagination I did, because the lights went out before she went down.
Senator BURTON. How did she sink?
Mr. OLLIVER. She was well down at the head at first, when we got away from her at first, and to my idea she broke forward, and the afterpart righted itself and made another plunge and went right down. I fancied I saw her black form. It was dark, and I fancied I saw her black form going that way.
Senator BURTON. Did she careen over, tip over sideways, or did she go ahead?
Mr. OLLIVER. She went ahead, like that [indicating].
Senator BURTON. Did you hear explosions?
Mr. OLLIVER. I heard several little explosions, but it was not such explosions as I expected to hear.
Senator BURTON. Were these before or after she sank?
Mr. OLLIVER. Before she sank and while she was sinking.
Senator BURTON. What did you think those explosions were?
Mr. OLLIVER. Myself, I thought they were like bulkheads giving in.
And it's all synced
```. I heard several little explosions, ```
FACT: The author of the book was poisoned to death a couple years after the Titanic sank.
Fact: People can make the biggest mistakes of their life because they were assured it would be unsinkable
Mr. WARD. She gave a kind of sudden lurch forward, and I heard a couple of reports, reports more like a volley of musketry than anything else. You would not exactly call them a heavy explosion. It did not seem to me like an explosion at all.
Mr. CROWE. Yes, sir; then there was an explosion, and the aft part turned on end and sank.
more like he overdosed on something
Senator BOURNE. Did you hear any explosion or noise?
Mr. ANDREWS. I heard just a small sound, sir; it was not very loud, but just a small sound.
FACT: The Federal Reserve was formed the very next year.
John Collins, Cook on Lifeboat B
Mr. Collins does not specifically say he saw the ship split apart, but his comments do seem to indicate he felt the ship was broken apart by the explosions. Collins had been thrown into the water from the Boat Deck going under.
Mr. Clench did not know if the ship broke apart, though he did hear several explosions.
, and she was going down by the bow most all the time, and all of a sudden there were four sharp explosions about that
FACT: The Astor Family was one of the richest families in the world and John Astor III opposed the Federal Reserve.
John Jacob Astor IV, the richest man in the world at the time, a friend of Nikola Tesla, and an outspoken opponent of the creation of the Federal Reserve. Astor gained his wealth, in part, as a real estate builder, investor, and inventor. Other prominent Federal Reserve detractors, such as Benjamin Guggenheim and Isa Strauss, also died on board.
Sounds like an orchestrated hit to get rid of a lot of thorns in the eye of the globalists
and a massive one after the ship was evacuated
because things blew apart.
I'm now leaning towards "bomb"/Cover up
<:why:530294014612865034>
Got a photograph of this "iceberg" ?
Why not land the ship on the iceberg then
This ship was "unsinkable"
way easier to do that
The ship had bulkheads in case of hull failure
are there any unsinkable ships today?
surely we would have passed that point
SS Prinz Eugen surivived 2 nuclear blasts and had to be torpedoed repeatedly in order to sink
German Engineering
ships sink more often than we think. to think it was unsinkable was a ego stroke of the designer
Photograph of the iceberg?
NONE of the witnesses recall seeing an iceberg
Wahhyyyy hello
🇫 <:a_:507995510624354305> 🇨 🇹