Oceangate Sub Disaster-What They're NOT Talking About

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  • Опубликовано: 26 июн 2023
  • In this episode I ask why rescue efforts were mounted and continued for DAYS even though it was known that the sub had imploded at the time the coms went down. My heart goes out to the families of those lost.
    The deep sea is a dangerous place and needs to be treated with the utmost of respect.
    #oceangate
    #submarine
    #implosion
    #titanic
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Комментарии • 29

  • @roybrochu5409
    @roybrochu5409 Год назад +2

    Great info. Thing to remember, sure the Navy heard the implosion, but they may not have known that submersible was diving on the wreck. Also it is a Top Secret listening array. They didn’t even have to say anything.

    • @bluecordprecisiongrading2504
      @bluecordprecisiongrading2504  Год назад

      Remember, the SAME military that heard the implosion also mounted the multi day "rescue" effort

    • @cwolf8841
      @cwolf8841 Год назад +4

      The Navy knew the location and told the Coast Guard. Although I thought the Canadian Navy was closer?
      The Coast Guard made the decision to wait. I’d guess they felt it was better to soften the blow.
      Even if they were 100% certain all were dead, they’d still continue recovery operations to basically do a post mortem.The USCG reports to U.S. Department of Homeland Security (not under DOD) and civilian nautical disasters are their mission. The Navy by definition would defer to the Incident Commander (the USCG).
      The reality is that the open seas are not regulated by any single country or organization. Each issue is handled seperately.... so the Navy does go after pirates around Africa.... but merchant vessels are also arming themselves.

    • @tony8354586
      @tony8354586 Год назад

      Government made the rescue so important and drew everybody in, took away from the Hunter Biden IRS fiasco…..

    • @jessehachey2732
      @jessehachey2732 Год назад

      @@tony8354586 What a m0r0nic take! 🙄🤡

  • @kathleenmckenna8578
    @kathleenmckenna8578 Год назад

    Yes, hope it was quick.

  • @CHIEFSFAN1969
    @CHIEFSFAN1969 Год назад +2

    The answer is the same as why people especially kids aren't usually pronounced on the street, but transported and called in the hospital. It makes people feel better thinking that at least they tried. The ocean and space are really dangerous places to explore. 😔

    • @bluecordprecisiongrading2504
      @bluecordprecisiongrading2504  Год назад +3

      I get that, but the thought of "going through the motions" while spending a pile of money doing it just for show...

    • @jeffreyreagan5818
      @jeffreyreagan5818 Год назад +3

      ​@@bluecordprecisiongrading2504 Never let a good catastrophe go to waste as they say all the time. The news media collectively pulled a lift and shift so just as one example, Hunter Biden news was not very popular. What else was not widely talked about but much more important?

    • @bluecordprecisiongrading2504
      @bluecordprecisiongrading2504  Год назад

      @@jeffreyreagan5818That's exactly right. Hunter, should he have been judged like us "commoners" would be in prison. Put Oceangate on the front page and the Hunter story, and other scandals, are forgotten

  • @francesmaurer185
    @francesmaurer185 Год назад

    Thank you for sharing 🙏

  • @DanielTorres-hu1zq
    @DanielTorres-hu1zq Год назад

    Very informative. Thanks.

  • @bruceslawncarenist9234
    @bruceslawncarenist9234 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the info

    • @bluecordprecisiongrading2504
      @bluecordprecisiongrading2504  Год назад

      Everything I talk about in this video is unclassified but hardly anyone is asking why the rescue efforts took place

  • @timhensley1297
    @timhensley1297 Год назад

    I believe they should of kept looking as they did.

    • @bluecordprecisiongrading2504
      @bluecordprecisiongrading2504  Год назад

      I don't necessarily disagree with that. To cling on to some sliver of hope is the most human of traits. I will say that nothing happens in the oceans without the US knowing exactly what happened

  • @yanniskouretas8688
    @yanniskouretas8688 Год назад +1

    Recording the sound and verifying are two very different things . The Coast Guard has the obligation to conduct search and rescue as per the law of the seas (even in international waters). For the internationally established minimum of 72 hours they did their best ...

    • @bluecordprecisiongrading2504
      @bluecordprecisiongrading2504  Год назад

      Yes, the Coast Guard did its job. I'm just talking about the politics involved in this whole thing. They knew what happened but kept up the facade that there was hope. In truth it was better for the crew to have a quick and painless ending than the alternative

  • @benzomanic2972
    @benzomanic2972 Год назад

    Great stuff!!!

  • @elainebilodeau6123
    @elainebilodeau6123 Год назад

    So sad for all of the deceased and their families.

  • @jessehachey2732
    @jessehachey2732 Год назад +1

    This clip is misleading from the get go! They didn’t know for certain right away that it had imploded! Sounds are picked up in the ocean all the time (case in point, they heard “banging noises” at 30 mins intervals *after* the crew had been eclipsed and had passed…) and they didn’t necessarily have a human analysing recordings in real time either, could have taken hours to days to analyze! Besides, of course they’d keep the search going in light of not being certain of their fate. What a bollocks clip! WTF 🙄🤦🏼‍♂️

    • @bluecordprecisiongrading2504
      @bluecordprecisiongrading2504  Год назад

      I'm not sure of your background, but during my time in the Army I worked with the FBI and Central Intelligence. I'm not saying I know more than you, since your background may very well trump mine, but I will say that nothing happens in the oceans without the United States knowing exactly what happened