I think he made an honest accidental omission. Not something to dwell on.surprise_i'm_armed wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2019 6:06 pm Philip964: You stated "there were 3 planes lost on 9/11 alone".
My count = 4. Two into the WTC, 1 into the ground in Shanksville, PA, and 1 into the Pentagon.
Perhaps your count = only 3, since there is no clearly ID'd plane wreckage in the Pentagon? Maybe that?
SIA
Malaysia Airlines Flight Vanishes
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Re: Malaysia Airlines Flight Vanishes
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
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― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
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Re: Malaysia Airlines Flight Vanishes
Sorry to the memories of the passengers and crew of Flight 93. I was counting buildings, not planes in my mind when I typed that.surprise_i'm_armed wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2019 6:06 pm Philip964: You stated "there were 3 planes lost on 9/11 alone".
My count = 4. Two into the WTC, 1 into the ground in Shanksville, PA, and 1 into the Pentagon.
Perhaps your count = only 3, since there is no clearly ID'd plane wreckage in the Pentagon? Maybe that?
SIA
Re: Malaysia Airlines Flight Vanishes
In Zahaire's case, I think you are grossly overstating how difficult or risky it was for him to hijack his own plane. It wasn't difficult at all for him, flying that plane was something he had already spent thousands of hours doing, in exactly the airspace he chose (meaning he knew the likely reactions of air traffic control and the Malaysian air force). Really, the only odd thing he had to due was subdue the copilot, which could have been as easy as asking him to go aft and locking the door behind him. After that he could fly it into the ground or the ocean any time he chose. In this case, he chose to fly off into the Indian ocean. Cutting off communications and killing the passengers by depressurization were not absolutely necessary for his plans, but the fact that he was able to do it just meant he had longer to fly away before crashing, since no one outside the plane was notified that something was wrong.MaduroBU wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2019 3:35 pmThat makes sense to a point, but then why go to the trouble of killing so many people? If you broaden the horizon to include other similar patterns of behavior like mass shooters, in every case the killer could've committed suicide in a more certain fashion had they chosen to kill only themselves. Zahaire would've been throw into a hellish Malaysian prison had he failed, while Paddock or the engineer in Virginia would've been thrown into prison lives that they were very poorly adapted to withstand. In all cases, suicide would've then become much harder. If the goal was, "I am in terrible pain and I want to end it all", then the machinations required to murder strangers were DIRECTLY OPPOSED to that goal even for people who didn't care at all who they had to hurt to kill themselves. The argument that their reasoning was blinded by pain doesn't hold water given the meticulous and successful planning that went into all of these attacks.ELB wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2019 2:22 pm I would guess that most suicidal people do not care about other people, but this generally results in them not really caring about how their death affects others. They justify it to themselves by “they’re better off without me,” but they are so focused on their own pain they cannot empathize with anyone else’s.
A suicidal sociopath, who already cares nothing for others, will think nothing of taking several hundred people with him.
...
As for the sociopath aspect -- we don't know for sure that Zahaire was in fact a sociopath, but crashing an airliner with a couple hundred people in it is a pretty strong clue. Others had noticed changes in him prior to that flight, but either didn't want to act on them, and/or they didn't seem serious enough to act on. And if he was sociopathic, then he was also very good at masking his inner, true self and people would not have seen him coming anyway.
ETA:
I wasn't arguing that Zahaire (or any other sociopathic mass killer) was blinded by his own pain. I was referring most suicides, which are individual and by people whose mental state has deteriorated to a complete focus on their own problems and pain - I think they lose the ability to be concerned with anyone else. I was contrasting the suicidal sociopaths with this. Sociopaths don't care about other people in the first place, so when they decide to exit in a blaze of killing they care even less about those they take with them. The whole killing spree is about themselves, drawing attention to themselves.The argument that their reasoning was blinded by pain doesn't hold water given the meticulous and successful planning that went into all of these attacks.
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Re: Malaysia Airlines Flight Vanishes
A very interesting article.philip964 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2019 8:19 am https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/ar ... es/590653/
The Atlantic says people on the ground know more than they are telling.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
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― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
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Re: Malaysia Airlines Flight Vanishes
My BIL is a United Captain. He says they are just keeping us in the dark.The Annoyed Man wrote: ↑Tue Jun 18, 2019 4:48 pmA very interesting article.philip964 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2019 8:19 am https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/ar ... es/590653/
The Atlantic says people on the ground know more than they are telling.
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Re: Malaysia Airlines Flight Vanishes
Do you mean the Malaysians?WTR wrote: ↑Tue Jun 18, 2019 4:54 pmMy BIL is a United Captain. He says they are just keeping us in the dark.The Annoyed Man wrote: ↑Tue Jun 18, 2019 4:48 pmA very interesting article.philip964 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2019 8:19 am https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/ar ... es/590653/
The Atlantic says people on the ground know more than they are telling.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
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Re: Malaysia Airlines Flight Vanishes
I was taught in Paramedic School that the drive to stay alive is one of not the strongest drives in the human mind, when somebody is willing to kill themselves, then killing you isn't a big deal to them!
Government, like fire is a dangerous servant and a fearful master
If you ain't paranoid you ain't paying attention
Don't fire unless fired upon, but if they mean to have a war let it begin here- John Parker
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Re: Malaysia Airlines Flight Vanishes
My former employer and long time friend, who owned the business that brought me along to Texas when it moved here, took his own life 18 months after we got here. He wasn’t homicidal, and he made no effort to place other people in danger. In my experience, most suicides do not. They just go off somewhere where nobody can stop them, and they kill themselves. So I think that the willingness (or desire, as the case may be) to take other people out with you, is an exception rather than the rule; and it must necessarily include some other profoundly disturbed psychiatric state.crazy2medic wrote: ↑Tue Jun 18, 2019 7:35 pm I was taught in Paramedic School that the drive to stay alive is one of not the strongest drives in the human mind, when somebody is willing to kill themselves, then killing you isn't a big deal to them!
My friend was bipolar, and had fought the disease since high school. He was a successful, married father and business owner. He lost his fight with his disease at age 45, so he fought the good fight for 30 years. He (wrongly) felt that others in his life would be better off and happier without him, which turns out to be a common delusion among suicides. The murderous ones are after something else—fame/notoriety, glory, making a statement, etc.
My point is that the MH370 pilot was one of the murderous ones—not your average suicide.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
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Re: Malaysia Airlines Flight Vanishes
I do understand where your coming from, I have taken my fair share to the psychic ward, but because first responders can get any number of mental patient with an unknown background, it's certainly better to be OVERLY cautious than to be too relaxed with somebody that wants to go to the next world and take you along on the journey!The Annoyed Man wrote: ↑Tue Jun 18, 2019 8:17 pmMy former employer and long time friend, who owned the business that brought me along to Texas when it moved here, took his own life 18 months after we got here. He wasn’t homicidal, and he made no effort to place other people in danger. In my experience, most suicides do not. They just go off somewhere where nobody can stop them, and they kill themselves. So I think that the willingness (or desire, as the case may be) to take other people out with you, is an exception rather than the rule; and it must necessarily include some other profoundly disturbed psychiatric state.crazy2medic wrote: ↑Tue Jun 18, 2019 7:35 pm I was taught in Paramedic School that the drive to stay alive is one of not the strongest drives in the human mind, when somebody is willing to kill themselves, then killing you isn't a big deal to them!
My friend was bipolar, and had fought the disease since high school. He was a successful, married father and business owner. He lost his fight with his disease at age 45, so he fought the good fight for 30 years. He (wrongly) felt that others in his life would be better off and happier without him, which turns out to be a common delusion among suicides. The murderous ones are after something else—fame/notoriety, glory, making a statement, etc.
My point is that the MH370 pilot was one of the murderous ones—not your average suicide.
Government, like fire is a dangerous servant and a fearful master
If you ain't paranoid you ain't paying attention
Don't fire unless fired upon, but if they mean to have a war let it begin here- John Parker
If you ain't paranoid you ain't paying attention
Don't fire unless fired upon, but if they mean to have a war let it begin here- John Parker
Re: Malaysia Airlines Flight Vanishes
Maybe the act really was that easy for him. But all of those people? They didn't harm him- he wouldn't have recognized any if them had he seen them even during the flight. I interact with suicidal people on a very regular basis and they are uniformly either fixated upon themselves and their troubles or deeply sorry. Homicidal ideation is not something that I encounter with any frequency. I have never met a patient who would just off a plan full of strangers, and I have met some bad folks. I worked in the TDC hospital for a long time. The offenders by and large weren't monsters, at least not the sort that would do something like this.
Re: Malaysia Airlines Flight Vanishes
There was a case where the Co-Pilot intentionally locked the Captain out of the cockpit when the Capt. stepped out for a RR break. The Co-Pilot then set the autopilot to fly into the ground., and refused to open the cockpit door even as people pounded on the door.......So it has happened. I believe it was a Luftansa flight.MaduroBU wrote: ↑Tue Jun 18, 2019 11:36 pm Maybe the act really was that easy for him. But all of those people? They didn't harm him- he wouldn't have recognized any if them had he seen them even during the flight. I interact with suicidal people on a very regular basis and they are uniformly either fixated upon themselves and their troubles or deeply sorry. Homicidal ideation is not something that I encounter with any frequency. I have never met a patient who would just off a plan full of strangers, and I have met some bad folks. I worked in the TDC hospital for a long time. The offenders by and large weren't monsters, at least not the sort that would do something like this.
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Re: Malaysia Airlines Flight Vanishes
The only mystery is that why the pilot let plane fly for hours south, instead of a steep dive and instant death.
Why he had the interest of not finding the airplane in the first place. His reputation? Was he protecting someone's eligibility for life insurance?
Why he had the interest of not finding the airplane in the first place. His reputation? Was he protecting someone's eligibility for life insurance?
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Re: Malaysia Airlines Flight Vanishes
Perhaps so that we would still be talking about him years later.Beiruty wrote: ↑Wed Jun 19, 2019 7:27 am The only mystery is that why the pilot let plane fly for hours south, instead of a steep dive and instant death.
Why he had the interest of not finding the airplane in the first place. His reputation? Was he protecting someone's eligibility for life insurance?
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Re: Malaysia Airlines Flight Vanishes
FWIW, I think it was because the cockpit was the last place where he still felt somewhat in control of his life. It was a cocoon for him. So after literally putting everyone else on the aircraft to sleep before asphyxiating them (read the above linked Atlantic article), he drew that moment out as long as he could, knowing what lay at the end of that moment.threoh8 wrote: ↑Wed Jun 19, 2019 9:04 amPerhaps so that we would still be talking about him years later.Beiruty wrote: ↑Wed Jun 19, 2019 7:27 am The only mystery is that why the pilot let plane fly for hours south, instead of a steep dive and instant death.
Why he had the interest of not finding the airplane in the first place. His reputation? Was he protecting someone's eligibility for life insurance?
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
#TINVOWOOT
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
#TINVOWOOT