that’s a good thing. they most likely imploded then which would be better than the alternative…
That’s c-suite cac babel saying “I refuse to pay a boomer 4x what I need to pay a millennial or gen z, so I will just hire them and outsource all of the engineering to cheapest consultants so I can find to make the bottom line look better”The more I read on him it changes from empathy to anger. My goodness. And I hate to be political but he really does sound like aTrump, Elon knockoff.
“I mean, if you just want to be safe, don’t get out of bed,” he said. “Don’t get in your car. Don’t do anything. At some point, you’re going to take some risk, and it really is a risk-reward question. I think I can do this just as safely by breaking the rules.”
Smh
I was in the same boat () until I finally watched it in my mid-20s, I was 9 when the movie came out.I'm probably the only person in this thread who has never watched the movie Titanic.
That company going bankrupt regardlessThe only “employee” on the ship was the owner/CEO. They can sue the company into oblivion, won’t matter. The dead CEO said himself the company never turned a profit. Now he’s dead and the ship is gone, the rep is in the trash = no way to make future revenue.
It's crazy how they just so happen to have the ability to produce light in the deepest parts of the ocean? AliensMany marine species that dwell in the deep ocean e.g. jellyfish, worms, sharks and sea stars are bioluminescent (can create light).
In fact, scientists estimate that 76% of all ocean animals have this capability.
This along with the fact someone has gone down twice as deep back in the 1960s is making me think there's a tiny chance the vessel is still in tact.Missing Titan sub likely intact but out of power, says expert who designed deepest-diving submersible
Engineer Ron Allum says missing tourist sub unlikely to have suffered a ‘catastrophic implosion’ but partial flooding could be preventing it from resurfacingwww.theguardian.com