This conclusion was made as far back as January. It sounded good then but I was hoping that the pilot's ethnicity wouldn't play into it. Oh well, chalk another mass murder up to a suicidal, (self)radicalized, Islamic, extremist.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... board.html
Strange Plane Disappearance...
Strange Plane Disappearance...

“In a world whose absurdity appears to be so impenetrable, we simply must reach a greater degree of understanding among us, a greater sincerity.”
- Bicycle Bill
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Re: Strange Plane Disappearance...
Seems to me that all we have is still just supposition. So the guy flew a simulated flight into a remote area of the Indian Ocean? Hell, when I had the Microsoft flight simulator I flew under the Golden Gate Bridge and then into the Transamerica Tower just to see what the graphics would show (I was rather disappointed, as I recall). So does that make me a potential 'rogue' pilot who's going to commit suicide with an Airbus 380 or a Boeing Dreamliner and take everybody on board with me?
At this point, we know as much about what happened to Flight MH370 as we do about what positively happened to the Mary Celeste, D.B. Cooper, Jimmy Hoffa, Judge Crater, or even Amelia Earhart. While the circumstantial evidence along with the lack of any definitive physical evidence strongly supports the theory put forth — and I'll agree, it's far more logical and believable than the tin-foil brigade and their talk of space aliens, time warps, death rays from lost civilizations, government cover-ups, or wormholes to the fourth dimension — it is still just a theory.
-"BB"-
At this point, we know as much about what happened to Flight MH370 as we do about what positively happened to the Mary Celeste, D.B. Cooper, Jimmy Hoffa, Judge Crater, or even Amelia Earhart. While the circumstantial evidence along with the lack of any definitive physical evidence strongly supports the theory put forth — and I'll agree, it's far more logical and believable than the tin-foil brigade and their talk of space aliens, time warps, death rays from lost civilizations, government cover-ups, or wormholes to the fourth dimension — it is still just a theory.

-"BB"-
Yes, I suppose I could agree with you ... but then we'd both be wrong, wouldn't we?
Re: Strange Plane Disappearance...
DB Cooper died trying to skydive from a 727, Earhart crashed on or near Gardner Island.
Treat Gaza like Carthage.
Strange Plane Disappearance...
And evolution is still just a theory. I believe this story 100% and I'm sticking with it until "one day" they find the FDR and/or the CVR that proves me right or wrong.Bicycle Bill wrote:... (MH370 disappearance) — it is still just a theory.

“In a world whose absurdity appears to be so impenetrable, we simply must reach a greater degree of understanding among us, a greater sincerity.”
- Bicycle Bill
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Re: Strange Plane Disappearance...
In those cases, you are correct that this is probably what happened, but we do not know this for a fact or beyond a shadow of a doubt. They never found Cooper's body, the parachutes, or the bulk of the ransom money; and while there have been things found on Gardner Island that might be connected with Earhart, they never found any wreckage or any remains, clothing, or other personal effects that could be positively identified as being from Earhart or her aircraft.Jarlaxle wrote:DB Cooper died trying to skydive from a 727, Earhart crashed on or near Gardner Island.

-"BB"-
Yes, I suppose I could agree with you ... but then we'd both be wrong, wouldn't we?
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Re: Strange Plane Disappearance...
What do you know beyond a shadow of a doubt?Bicycle Bill wrote:but we do not know this for a fact or beyond a shadow of a doubt.

For Christianity, by identifying truth with faith, must teach-and, properly understood, does teach-that any interference with the truth is immoral. A Christian with faith has nothing to fear from the facts
Re: Strange Plane Disappearance...
The article states that the cost of the search for MH370 has already exceeding $130 million, mentions that wreckage from the craft has been recovered, and then says,
Yes, I do understand that valuable information is gained by flight data recorders and piecing together plane wreckage and figuring out what caused a crash. But since there is decent evidence that it was a suicidal pilot, and a ridiculously difficult undertaking to find a needle in a haystack, hadn't they better let it go and use the next $130 million toward, maybe, the greater public good instead?
I feel sorry for the families of the victims, but answers won't bring them back, or help them cope with the loss. That's something they need to focus on doing because the answers are never really helpful with the grieving, anyway.
I'm sorry, but at what point is it just a ridiculous waste of public resources? The people on board are DEAD. They're never coming back. They're not LOST on an undiscovered island in the Indian Ocean. Whether they are victims of a suicidal pilot or malfunction of the aircraft, is it REALLY worth this amount of money to keep searching for the black box?The fact that Zaharie apparently practiced flying until he ran out of fuel over the remote southern Indian Ocean suggests the current search is on the right track — and that another year of hunting might be a worthwhile investment.

Yes, I do understand that valuable information is gained by flight data recorders and piecing together plane wreckage and figuring out what caused a crash. But since there is decent evidence that it was a suicidal pilot, and a ridiculously difficult undertaking to find a needle in a haystack, hadn't they better let it go and use the next $130 million toward, maybe, the greater public good instead?
I feel sorry for the families of the victims, but answers won't bring them back, or help them cope with the loss. That's something they need to focus on doing because the answers are never really helpful with the grieving, anyway.
For me, it is far better to grasp the Universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring.
~ Carl Sagan
~ Carl Sagan