"There's No Bodies To Recover, The Implosion Is So Rapid" | Former US Navy Captain on Titanic Sub

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  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024
  • Former US Navy Captain David Marquet tells TalkTV that people should not expect to find any remains following the deaths aboard the Titan submersible.
    He warned that people underestimate the power of the sea, and speaking about the damage caused by an underwater implosion in the depths of the ocean he said: "I hate to say it but there's no bodies to recover. The implosion is so rapid."
    When they say catastrophic implosion, it is a instantaneous destruction of the vessel and an instantaneous death for everyone on board."
    James Cameron says he is “struck by the similarity” of the Titan submersible tragedy and the sinking of the Titanic in 1912.
    The Hollywood director said many in the deep submergence engineering community had been “deeply concerned” about the OceanGate Expeditions craft that was reported missing on Sunday.
    Cameron, who directed 1997 Oscar-winning film Titanic, has designed and built similar submersibles and had himself visited the wreckage of the famous ocean liner 33 times.
    OceanGate announced on Thursday that the pilot and four passengers of the missing Titan submersible were believed to be dead.
    The tail cone was found around 1,600ft from the bow of the Titanic, which sank in the North Atlantic Ocean in 1912.

Комментарии • 14 тыс.

  • @Steav_00
    @Steav_00 Год назад +6672

    I appreciate the fact that he said what no one else had the balls to say. “There are no bodies to be recovered”

    • @macmen007
      @macmen007 Год назад +480

      At 5,700 psi of instant water pressure .... like a half a stick of dynamite in a melon

    • @rebeccahoffman2493
      @rebeccahoffman2493 Год назад +620

      I'm glad he made it clear that people do underestimate the power of the ocean.

    • @johnstamos2365
      @johnstamos2365 Год назад +470

      Unless you want body parts and trust me, the big fishes has already gotten to that!

    • @rabby77777
      @rabby77777 Год назад +29

      yes agreed

    • @MrPuka2018
      @MrPuka2018 Год назад +256

      These 5 are part of history 😢 family can view it as burial at sea

  • @TemmieContingenC
    @TemmieContingenC Год назад +5901

    The guy they fired for calling this submersible a safety hazard must have a good few words for this company. Probably the biggest “I told you so” this year.

    • @MagnumCarta
      @MagnumCarta Год назад +1001

      The guy they fired for calling this submarine a safety hazard didn't cave in to pressure.

    • @petsgamesandrobots438
      @petsgamesandrobots438 Год назад +63

      ​@@MagnumCartalulz

    • @DreamOnDamu
      @DreamOnDamu Год назад +156

      ​@@MagnumCartanever too soon, just the right time

    • @NateF9515
      @NateF9515 Год назад +568

      The guy actually has a lawsuit against the company for it too and with the new events he will probably win

    • @sharonlatour6230
      @sharonlatour6230 Год назад +128

      ABSOLUTELY!!!!!!! This should have NEVER EVER happened!

  • @UsDiYoNa
    @UsDiYoNa Год назад +650

    Being instantaneously emulsified seems a better option that being knowingly stuck on the bottom of the ocean waiting to die. Prayers to families.

    • @amethystAnge7
      @amethystAnge7 Год назад +12

      Agreed

    • @bigbadchupa9511
      @bigbadchupa9511 Год назад +8

      Was thinking the same thing

    • @iamhorcruxer
      @iamhorcruxer Год назад +21

      I guess but gotdamn that’s scary

    • @PaulJoanKieth
      @PaulJoanKieth Год назад +8

      emulsified? there was soap involved?

    • @AstroBimpson
      @AstroBimpson Год назад +18

      ​@Hendizzy ya, but it's infinitely less scary than being stuck in a dark cold and cramped confined space for 90 hours with 4 other people while you slowly suffocate.

  • @karolclark791
    @karolclark791 Год назад +618

    The guy who got fired for the warning must feel so relieved.
    But he spoke up and got fired but in his heart, he knows he did the right thing. Those deaths are not on his consciousness and he knows he did everything he can to prevent it

    • @cameronprior4698
      @cameronprior4698 Год назад +50

      He’s probably not at all relieved knowing what happened after he clearly sounded alarm bells that were ignorantly silenced.

    • @engineereells79
      @engineereells79 Год назад +9

      Any info on the story of who was fired? I'd be interested to read that...

    • @yglilly8453
      @yglilly8453 Год назад +3

      @@engineereells79same

    • @YamatoTre
      @YamatoTre Год назад +28

      I'd argue he feels worse. Screaming into the void, only able to watch as they essentially committed suicide.

    • @dm19609721
      @dm19609721 Год назад

      whistle blowers always get screwed. The blood is now on someone else's hands.

  • @stevelux9854
    @stevelux9854 Год назад +3107

    As an ex US Navy submariner I agree with everything said. This was a tragedy on several levels and appears that blatant incompetence and disregard for engineering and safety may well have played a factor.

    • @danamoss5705
      @danamoss5705 Год назад +213

      And a blatant disregard for the ocean and its destructive power.

    • @kathygodfrey3158
      @kathygodfrey3158 Год назад +224

      Millionaires, unfortunately, think rules don't apply to them. Even the laws of nature, apparently. Very sad.

    • @LToONG33
      @LToONG33 Год назад +4

      lookup JAY FLY RED - Will You Remember in the search bar because your memory serves you well ! lolc

    • @susanbengston3208
      @susanbengston3208 Год назад +11

      Yes, The Implosion Factor.

    • @shdz57
      @shdz57 Год назад +84

      Despite safety concerns by experts, they were negligently ignored by the founder. The submersible was a safety mess. Lives were lost because of one man's ignorance and greed. May they rest in peace,

  • @thewiseone6049
    @thewiseone6049 Год назад +1454

    The CEO said it himself "I want to be remembered for breaking the rules." Well, he achieved that at least.

    • @lamontejohnson9079
      @lamontejohnson9079 Год назад +90

      Very eerily similar to the man that wanted to make headlines arriving in NY early on the Titanic..he too got his headlines

    • @Jackholiday1025
      @Jackholiday1025 Год назад +15

      Why would he want to be remembered for that though.

    • @CityChristina
      @CityChristina Год назад +17

      And not in a good way.

    • @Sejuani89
      @Sejuani89 Год назад +57

      One rule he never broke was the rules of physics.

    • @TheRealSkeletor
      @TheRealSkeletor Год назад +49

      @@Jackholiday1025 He thought he would be hailed as an innovator, for pushing boundaries instead of getting caught up in red tape and bureaucracy by exercising due diligence and getting his subs certified for safety.

  • @esthaaaaaa
    @esthaaaaaa Год назад +2207

    It’s oddly comforting to hear that the death was instantaneous and not a slow, painful one. Imagine being stuck in the abyss for hours knowing there’s no way out of this

    • @nonconsensualopinion
      @nonconsensualopinion Год назад +91

      I think they just call that comforting. Why would it be odd? It's comforting to know those who died did not suffer.

    • @ajgameguy3674
      @ajgameguy3674 Год назад +169

      ​@@nonconsensualopinionIt's odd because they're saying that it's comforting that the people died in the sub quickly. Obviously makes sense in context, better to go out quickly than slowly, but it's still weird to be comforted by.

    • @collectiblesnrandomstuff544
      @collectiblesnrandomstuff544 Год назад +64

      There was definitely a quick moment of pain though. No death is ever instant

    • @Lt.GonvilleBromhead
      @Lt.GonvilleBromhead Год назад +277

      @@collectiblesnrandomstuff544 Not at the speed it happens. The brain wouldn't have time to even register the pain before it is crushed.

    • @tvviewer4500
      @tvviewer4500 Год назад +44

      if it was instantaneous than what was tapping on the sub hull??

  • @triggeredcat120
    @triggeredcat120 Год назад +192

    The guy that was fired for sounding off warnings for how badly designed this vessel was is free of blood guilt. The biggest “I told you so” of the decade.

  • @bluestar2253
    @bluestar2253 Год назад +3026

    The US navy captain really hits the nail when he described what's left of a person subjected to 400X atmospheric pressure!

    • @killman369547
      @killman369547 Год назад +305

      Even just 9 atmospheres can really mess you up as the people aboard the Byford Dolphin found out one horrible day.

    • @mill2712
      @mill2712 Год назад +344

      ​@@killman369547
      For context, there are images of that incident and the bodies look like ground beef.
      Can't imagine 400 atmospheres.
      Edit: Question was theoretical. Comment to someone else. You're taking up my notifications.

    • @Panther-
      @Panther- Год назад +160

      So what about fish which live in that environment,are they made of titanium?

    • @jamesdewbrey
      @jamesdewbrey Год назад +275

      Events like this makes me realise how vulnerable the human body is, and how powerful the sea is.

    • @Triumph865
      @Triumph865 Год назад +503

      @@Panther-yes. The fish are made of titanium that deep.

  • @TheWutangclan1995
    @TheWutangclan1995 Год назад +734

    Spoken like a true captain. Didn’t cater to anyones feelings other than telling us what happen. No sugarcoating or beating around the bush besides telling us, they’re dead.

    • @travisgoesthere
      @travisgoesthere Год назад +10

      Its a fact . If he said anything else it would be a lie. I dont see the bravery

    • @byrons1339
      @byrons1339 Год назад +8

      NONSENSE... I want to see some type of animation video as to what happens to human bodies when an implosion occurs at these depths (10,000+/- feet)

    • @christopher7763
      @christopher7763 Год назад +14

      There’s no BSing when it comes to the ocean

    • @glitter_fart
      @glitter_fart Год назад +2

      delta P

    • @richardlafleur8389
      @richardlafleur8389 Год назад +11

      @@byrons1339 Imagine a watermelon in a hydraulic press.

  • @salmaal-shaoily5809
    @salmaal-shaoily5809 Год назад +757

    And the 19 year old aunt said he didn't want to go, that he was terrified, but he went for his dad. Now that is tragic.

    • @nadia4999
      @nadia4999 Год назад +101

      Follow your own heart aka instinct.

    • @bugsbunnypoo
      @bugsbunnypoo Год назад +123

      I know it’s so sad he just wanted to please his dad for Father’s Day :(

    • @Mr.Obongo
      @Mr.Obongo Год назад +82

      He had a gut feeling

    • @SHAWNEESKYWALKER
      @SHAWNEESKYWALKER Год назад +29

      Omg. Seriously ?

    • @LToONG33
      @LToONG33 Год назад +2

      lookup JAY FLY RED - Will You Remember in the search bar because your memory serves you well ! lolc

  • @GlitchedBlox
    @GlitchedBlox Год назад +121

    He ignored the pressure test, but he can't ignore the ocean's pressure test.

    • @pillowbugg
      @pillowbugg Год назад

      Ayn Rand

    • @ambermchugh9381
      @ambermchugh9381 Год назад +3

      I saw a video from a guy that took a44 Oz Styrofoam cup down in the foam and it compressed to a solid little 2 or 3 in block. Crazy

    • @khalilboss2855
      @khalilboss2855 Год назад

      They did multiple lab pressure tests on the vessel. But the ocean did one single pressure test on them

  • @pewsandbrews
    @pewsandbrews Год назад +1438

    Imagine being stuck for 3 days, in the freezing cold, no food or water, claustrophobic conditions. That would be a far worse death than the implosion that happened on descent.

    • @Yellodaise13
      @Yellodaise13 Год назад +133

      Good thing that wasn’t the case

    • @tractorreactor
      @tractorreactor Год назад +12

      I'm just happy it took 3 days for this to happen. I hope the faces of all they people wronged showed up

    • @49ersfoldem
      @49ersfoldem Год назад +28

      In complete ocean darkness 2 miles underwater

    • @TaterTotsNFanta
      @TaterTotsNFanta Год назад +64

      Breathing in nothing but farts after day 3

    • @zippyoffrainbow8174
      @zippyoffrainbow8174 Год назад +32

      Like being buried alive ….

  • @doylejodi7502
    @doylejodi7502 Год назад +872

    The man was trying to be very delicate on how he responded regarding potential body ‘recovery’ because he knew exactly why their wouldn’t be any of that going on.

    • @ellachristina7730
      @ellachristina7730 Год назад +41

      and such is life and death every damn day all around this world

    • @chromatic2006
      @chromatic2006 Год назад

      Yeah I think some people just don't understand the pressures at those depths, and the concussive force of an implosion. Within just a few milliseconds, they were turned into a red cloud in the water. There won't be any recovery, they are just particles now. It was an instant burial at sea, they had no time to even comprehend.

    • @tednicklas3538
      @tednicklas3538 Год назад +37

      Fish food..giving back to the ocean

    • @EGarrett01
      @EGarrett01 Год назад +25

      You can see videos of pressure implosions on here, it's like a balloon popping but in reverse.

    • @Beanmachine91
      @Beanmachine91 Год назад +5

      learn to spell

  • @elninorata3891
    @elninorata3891 Год назад +3794

    This tragedy could have been avoided if the developer would have listened to engineers and would have gotten the proper certifications.

    • @suzieparis6821
      @suzieparis6821 Год назад +79

      Too late for all that

    • @TransoceanicOutreach
      @TransoceanicOutreach Год назад +464

      It wouldn't have passed any certifications, that's why he didn't get it done.

    • @shaider1982
      @shaider1982 Год назад +135

      A few more 50 year old experts in the field (of whatever ehtnicity) to coach the young ones

    • @frederickbees2828
      @frederickbees2828 Год назад +19

      it's sad but he didn't have to being in international waters

    • @MrGgabber
      @MrGgabber Год назад

      In his defense, the engineers were white guys

  • @tinad382
    @tinad382 Год назад +302

    Feel sorry for the young boy that wanted to please his father and the families 😢

    • @anneboorman8754
      @anneboorman8754 Год назад +31

      Agree. The others wanted to and paid for the ride knowing full well the risk involved. He was the only one who didn’t want to go.

    • @theremnantarmy.info-Phenix736
      @theremnantarmy.info-Phenix736 Год назад +1

      like ..epstein and other evil devil worshippers... faked their exit..while the 100+ yrs titanic sits pretty intact!!!.. do not believe the devil worshippers lot...LIARS!!!

    • @rainy4354
      @rainy4354 Год назад +42

      @@anneboorman8754 He begged his aunt to stay home. He was scared. What a disgusting, horrid family/father... he was only 19.

    • @maxamahnken7325
      @maxamahnken7325 Год назад +4

      ha ha ha ha

    • @nicinoz
      @nicinoz Год назад +15

      @@rainy4354How would anyone know this would have happened? If it had all gone well, you’d be saying that that dad was wonderful for encouraging his son to go through with it. We can’t judge when all we have is hindsight, it’s not fair.

  • @lifealalexie
    @lifealalexie Год назад +534

    Every news channel I watched these past few days kept listing an implosion as the worst case scenario. I honestly felt and still feel that, second only to them surviving and somehow being rescued, this was the best outcome.
    It’s not a happy ending but it’s good to know they didn’t suffer. It sounds like it happened so fast they wouldn’t have even known what happened. That is so much better than slowly suffocating in the dark with little to no hope of rescue. RIP, and my prayers and condolences out to all the friends and loved ones left behind.

    • @WakandaBabe
      @WakandaBabe Год назад +44

      I agree. One person, in reporting the effects, said they wouldn't even have know anything was wrong. Here and then in less than a second (faster than the brain can realize)...gone. Very sad but mercifully they didn't suffer.

    • @mercedesmaintenance.6339
      @mercedesmaintenance.6339 Год назад +25

      I agree. I couldn't stop thinking about the horror of being trapped like that.

    • @TheWutangclan1995
      @TheWutangclan1995 Год назад +11

      I still think the banging noise they were telling us as sign of life was the implosion. To be that close to the ocean floor and finding out that debris has now floated to the surface. I’m picturing that it was from after the implosion making it’s way.

    • @wtfbros5110
      @wtfbros5110 Год назад +12

      The crew turned into red paste in a millisecond
      They never knew what hit them

    • @bitchinpinball
      @bitchinpinball Год назад +14

      Agreed as well. Better to go quickly rather than die slowly in an underwater tomb.

  • @viperviperpiro
    @viperviperpiro Год назад +1644

    As a former submariner, I can attest to fact that their deaths were instant and painless - at those depths the pressure is so intense that the implosion tears/compacts the human body faster than the signals from pain receptors can reach the brain.

    • @broniadeighton9971
      @broniadeighton9971 Год назад +208

      Thanks for the clarification. It was troubling me that they suffered before

    • @shanehodges6980
      @shanehodges6980 Год назад +110

      yeah sure bud, ex-submariner now uploading tik tok compilations on youtube ok

    • @KrustyKlown
      @KrustyKlown Год назад +66

      If one had to die... seems the preferable way to go.

    • @Agent-mb1xx
      @Agent-mb1xx Год назад +15

      Do you think they died before the implosion from the lack of oxygen?

    • @caphaddock1126
      @caphaddock1126 Год назад +30

      I struggle to visualize that how would be that implosion

  • @Daybydayelevate
    @Daybydayelevate Год назад +742

    I wasn’t a submariner, but I was on a carrier. One of the sayings we would say is “nomatter how mighty the vessel…. she is nowhere near as mighty as the deep blue herself.” RIP to the pioneers and explorers.

    • @Nunyobu
      @Nunyobu Год назад +9

      So, you stayed at a holiday Inn last night? Just kidding. Army was here. ✌️

    • @h8marxists663
      @h8marxists663 Год назад

      No, they were idiots. Enough of the misplaced homage.

    • @Daybydayelevate
      @Daybydayelevate Год назад +4

      🇺🇸

    • @oldmate86
      @oldmate86 Год назад +9

      RIP to the illprepared

    • @MEdGrant
      @MEdGrant Год назад +26

      “Pioneers and explorers”? Don’t you mean “wealthy, thrill-seeking tourists”?

  • @J_McPhearsom
    @J_McPhearsom Год назад +76

    I’ve worked as a reliability engineer, focused on pressure vessels >100-200ft tall, like reactors, fired heaters, fixed equipment in large oil refineries. The owner of submersible advertised using material, parts from oil & gas industry because they seem like similar concepts, (math, physics, etc), but they’re NOT interchangeable!
    As for why, generally - in prior work, and in most industrial applications, equipment is designed for containing pressure, heat, material inside, with stress induced by differential pressure between inside and atmosphere, where the materials are under tensile stress. The big BUT is that the materials for the submersible are under COMPRESSION, while most industrial off-shelf-parts, piping, etc, are designed for TENSILE stress (internal forces loaded in opposite direction!). So, that’s one BIG reason why they shouldn’t have been using off-the-shelf parts, metal, piping designed for different conditions! IT WASN’T DESIGNED FOR THAT! He might have had made vessel from material rated for super high tensile strength, but a fraction of that in compression!
    I can only imagine that engineer is also furious. Unfortunately, the owner here, hired that engineer for his expertise and to analyze critical safety of the prototype structure, only to ignore him for doing his job, which was to make sure no one dies! *I can say from experience, no one likes to listen to the reliability & safety engineers, because from perspective of a penny-pinching management, we are all harbingers of doom and “bad news”.* Like requests for money to fix or upgrade something that hasn’t broken yet, because our “tea leaves” predict it will fail soon! *An engineer is only a messenger for divine numbers we ritually bleed from the sacred governing equations, guided by our scripture of the all-mighty ASME and API codes! In LaPlace we trust!*
    That’s why I always included the financial risks/costs of doing nothing and letting equipment run to fail, “well if you do nothing, know that there’s a __% probability that in __ time it blows up,..costs..death..money…lawsuits money, etc. Now that I told you the risks, it’s on you to ignore me.” Basically, the whole presentation and technical justifications are just a polite and professional way for an engineer or subject-matter-expert to tell management, “Fuck Around. Find Out” 😂

    • @ItCameFromOuterHemel
      @ItCameFromOuterHemel Год назад +15

      Multiple engineers and other experts walked away from this company or warned they were playing with fire. It's inconceivable that the other founder of OceanGate is still maintaining we should "wait and see" what happened to their toy boat before making any judgment, but it's totally fucking clear that they were mavericks who didn't know what they hell they were doing and exploiting loopholes in maritime and safety regulations to the max.

    • @roadtoad7704
      @roadtoad7704 Год назад +4

      Your last quote is classic 👏 My son works on huge lime/cement kilns and many times noticed near failures of trunions and such and passes the soon-to- be failures to upper management. "Run it anyway!" they say. Until....

    • @mondochild
      @mondochild Год назад

      That phrase is being use around alot lately. Humans fighting for top spots on the news.

    • @directorbeau
      @directorbeau Год назад

      The engineer was white that's why the CEO didn't listen.

    • @ElectricalExistence
      @ElectricalExistence Год назад

      the owner was in hte sub, not sure he is that worried about it anymore.

  • @StudioMod
    @StudioMod Год назад +1621

    *For anyone who can't imagine what took place because they've never seen anything like it before:*
    An implosion can be just as strong as an explosion. It was instant. All you would see if you were a few meters away watching the sub would be an enormous burst of bubbles and debris. The water instantly equalized with the pressure, but it was the air that killed them, not the water. The air pressure would have been similar to that of a concussive pulse wave from a large artillery shell... which vaporizes you. Like two magnets coming together, the physical reaction was faster than any nerve conduction velocity possible and their entire bodies were shredded into organic material dust in a single, very loud burst. The entire infrastructure was obliterated in under a half of a second.
    ...It would be interesting to recreate this implosion with another faulty sub and record the event with a sub that's actually capable of reaching those depths. It would help people understand more viscerally the dangers of ocean pressure equalizing all at once.

    • @kcjazzy
      @kcjazzy Год назад +250

      So there are no bodies because there is nothing left of them.

    • @Dwight_
      @Dwight_ Год назад +44

      I saw a video where they made this sub and showed what would of happend and my first though was it would be interesthing too see this. In real life

    • @ranalakkis9820
      @ranalakkis9820 Год назад +110

      So they just turned into dust? In a second? Omg😟

    • @fubub3595
      @fubub3595 Год назад +9

      What about carbon fiber ,was it strong enough?

    • @WillyJunior
      @WillyJunior Год назад +38

      "Concussive pulse wave" sir this isn't a video game. Stop trying to sound dramatic.

  • @happyapple4269
    @happyapple4269 Год назад +491

    You can feel pressure just diving to the bottom of a swimming pool.

    • @wileecoyote5749
      @wileecoyote5749 Год назад +59

      Now add 600 million tons per square inch at nearly 2.5 mile depth

    • @josephcoatofmanycolors
      @josephcoatofmanycolors Год назад +11

      exactly

    • @matheusfonseca8238
      @matheusfonseca8238 Год назад +17

      It's like all the Empire State on top of you.

    • @ginoe987
      @ginoe987 Год назад +8

      ​@@matheusfonseca82385 times

    • @peanutbutterisfu
      @peanutbutterisfu Год назад +27

      @@wileecoyote5749it’s 6,000 psi not 600 million tons psi nothing could stand 600 million tons psi

  • @oceankayak
    @oceankayak Год назад +539

    My mom took us to the beach all the time as we were growing up. She always said... "Never underestimate the power of the ocean"

    • @CozySims21
      @CozySims21 Год назад +2

      So true

    • @georgefirth
      @georgefirth Год назад +17

      My father says the same. He was in the royal navy for 9 years. His words ‘always respect the sea’, will always stay with me.

    • @karenholladay-ne9go
      @karenholladay-ne9go Год назад

      I've never seen an ocean and never will. ☹️

    • @peter-pg5yc
      @peter-pg5yc Год назад +2

      you never smelt my farts..

    • @kingmike40
      @kingmike40 Год назад +1

      Or the greed and stupidity of humans.

  • @ianjames1179
    @ianjames1179 Год назад +124

    Glad he had the courage to talk about the lack of bodies, everyone else was skirting the issue.

    • @theremnantarmy.info-Phenix736
      @theremnantarmy.info-Phenix736 Год назад +1

      like ..epstein and other evil devil worshippers... faked their exit..while the 100+ yrs titanic sits pretty intact!!!.. do not believe the devil worshippers lot...LIARS!!!

    • @jonsimmons4150
      @jonsimmons4150 Год назад +10

      atomised. literally.

    • @Louellastark
      @Louellastark Год назад +3

      They don’t need to because it’s obvious

    • @LostProxyNevermore
      @LostProxyNevermore Год назад +6

      @@Louellastarknot really. It’s not obvious at all- if you don’t know anything about implosions, you’re not gonna know what would happen to the bodies underwater. I had to do a ton of research to figure out what specifically happened to the bodies

    • @darrenlowe3445
      @darrenlowe3445 Год назад +3

      @@LostProxyNevermoreA tonne of research??
      Stop exaggerating. It’s a quick google search, nothing more.

  • @marisawojcikiewicz8148
    @marisawojcikiewicz8148 Год назад +639

    I was actually genuinely shocked when people started asking about body recovery… like… are you listening?

    • @angelapetrie2418
      @angelapetrie2418 Год назад

      Me too! Bloody idiots 🙄.

    • @palap9506
      @palap9506 Год назад +11

      was there body recovery tho?

    • @moneymonkeyman8280
      @moneymonkeyman8280 Год назад +79

      @@palap9506try listening

    • @Sharibaby80
      @Sharibaby80 Год назад +36

      There are a lot of ignorant folks out there but hopefully some are more the wiser learning about sea exploration.

    • @Sugurain
      @Sugurain Год назад +29

      I mean, if it wasn't instantaneous, there could be bodies still.
      But as everything suggests on the contrary, then yeah, they were liquefied.

  • @newyorknewyork9790
    @newyorknewyork9790 Год назад +303

    19 yrs old. So tragic. Sad. Sad. My deepest condolences to his mom.

  • @t.ellevision
    @t.ellevision Год назад +21

    This breaks my heart. I'm glad it was instant because literally waiting to suffocate would be terrifying,but it's still such a tragic event. Prayers for the family and friends they left behind🙏

  • @usethetools
    @usethetools Год назад +487

    My father, a WWII USN UDT/CB (Hardhat Underwater Demolition and Salvage Diver) and CB always told us, his children, water is unforgiving... he was very strict with swimming in the ocean, in our pool at home and when boating.

    • @jonathantan2469
      @jonathantan2469 Год назад +53

      At 15,000 meters in the sky, you can still eject & parachute to safety if your experimental plane starts breaking up.
      You cannot do that 3,000 meters below the sea.

    • @whoa9432
      @whoa9432 Год назад +8

      Sorry to hear your childhood sucked.

    • @tabasssumfatima5189
      @tabasssumfatima5189 Год назад +4

      True😢

    • @LToONG33
      @LToONG33 Год назад +1

      lookup JAY FLY RED - Will You Remember in the search bar because your memory serves you well ! lolc

    • @zackkohler511
      @zackkohler511 Год назад

      agreed

  • @ThomasKing19933
    @ThomasKing19933 Год назад +256

    Thank god it was so quick. Horrific but still a relief at the same time. RIP.

    • @garethmackinnon6782
      @garethmackinnon6782 Год назад +13

      I said the same thing thomas they died quick and they wouldent see it coming RIP

    • @dotconnector3889
      @dotconnector3889 Год назад +3

      Umm clarification. By RIP do you mean the more inaccurate but socially appropriate "rest in peace" or the more accurate, but less charming, "rest in pieces"?

    • @niss2142
      @niss2142 Год назад +1

      @@garethmackinnon6782 How would anyone know how fast they died since no one was there to witness it. They could have committed suicide. Or one person does them all then himself. We can only speculate. Don't you think the pilot might have said something like, "we don't have a chance". "In a few minutes we are going to blow up due to the ocean pressure." I mean, would you want to be conscious to experience that kind of death?

    • @wolfgangbloodymeatsack1687
      @wolfgangbloodymeatsack1687 Год назад

      No....even though it might have been quick (maybe, no one really knows for sure yet) the moments leading up to the critical moment must have been one living hell of a experience. At best, I think they had a moment to except the horrific death they were about to succumb. 😢 I really hope there was a black box....but probably not since they didn't go by full regulations

    • @davidstudebaker7397
      @davidstudebaker7397 Год назад +2

      ​@wolfgangbloodymeatsack1687 better then sitting on the bottom running out of air and going crazy, basically buried alive.

  • @vanessadebrino7231
    @vanessadebrino7231 Год назад +595

    Imagine the passengers who took a tour with the Titan prior to this disaster. Talk about dodging a bullet

    • @deelite5176
      @deelite5176 Год назад +105

      I’m sure some of those people will rethink how they live their lives, and maybe not tempt things that shouldn’t be tempted.

    • @davediamond7228
      @davediamond7228 Год назад +19

      at 250,000 per...there hasn't been all that many

    • @whatwhat9004
      @whatwhat9004 Год назад +51

      @@davediamond7228One of the guys who went on it last year said he paid only $110K. Meaning they increased the price by $140k in one year 😵. Greed is good

    • @Celt_Downunder
      @Celt_Downunder Год назад +49

      Exactly what I was thinking. I’ve been scuba diving for over 20 years. Deepest was 90ft. There is no way on earth or in ocean I would have gotten into that capsule to go to 13,000 ft. In my humble opinion it did not look fit for purpose.

    • @JamaicanBoy41
      @JamaicanBoy41 Год назад +8

      ​@whatwhat9004 mostly likely do to massive fuel increases over the last year. Most of cost of these trips was in the fuel alone.

  • @onikuman
    @onikuman Год назад +61

    Not many has mentioned this but it really sucks for the family members who will forever have this gruesome image in their head. A completely avoidable incident.

    • @ElectricalExistence
      @ElectricalExistence Год назад

      meat paste consumed by creatures in the darkest depths on earth.

    • @ElectricalExistence
      @ElectricalExistence Год назад +2

      @@cory8837 im sure their lives, hopes and dreams imploded when they were told the news.

    • @janetphillips2875
      @janetphillips2875 Год назад +4

      ​@@cory8837that was tacky

    • @DrewJPS
      @DrewJPS Год назад +4

      Granted. But I'd sure as fuck want to hear that my family member was vapourised in less time it takes for the spinal column to inform the brain.

    • @SoapinTrucker
      @SoapinTrucker Год назад +1

      ​​@@DrewJPSand it would still take a few more seconds for the body to even start to feel pain because of all the processing from shock, remember playing football when you were a kid? You got slammed to the ground that first few seconds you didn't know what was going on, they called it seeing Stars remember?

  • @Tusc9969
    @Tusc9969 Год назад +1338

    This is sad situation but the CEO’s recklessness is to blame. So sorry for the families.

    • @JayandSarah
      @JayandSarah Год назад +70

      Every single person getting on that should have known the extreme risks, and if they didn't, failure on them. You don't need to be even remotely interested in this sort of thing to recognize that going to the depth of the ocean this was at - comes with risks you do not recover from.
      The irony is, the wealthy folks on board had enough money collectively to hire someone to build a unit to some certified standards themselves and have a much safer potential outcome.
      I guess the $250k seemed more palpable than $25 million split between a pair of billionaires. (Shoulder shrug).

    • @aprilg3299
      @aprilg3299 Год назад +22

      Well they new the risk..

    • @LP-hs6yz
      @LP-hs6yz Год назад +19

      His greed.

    • @metasaurus3233
      @metasaurus3233 Год назад +82

      ​@@aprilg3299they knew the risks, but the ceo's negligence made the risks far greater than they should have been.

    • @SC-dm1ct
      @SC-dm1ct Год назад +20

      Didn't one of the men bring his kid with him?

  • @TheCommunistColin
    @TheCommunistColin Год назад +352

    Fun fact: in 2018 one of the CEO's workers was fired after he tried to inform the CEO that the submersible had serious safety concerns. The CEO then sued him for "fraud" for his "lying" to OSHA and other regulatory bodies. This vessel should never have been allowed to go the surface. RIP to all who perished.

    • @c-qc-q2021
      @c-qc-q2021 Год назад +29

      Methinks the former employee won or has grounds for appeal.

    • @buckhorncortez
      @buckhorncortez Год назад +25

      Why is this a "fun fact"? Can you tell me what's fun about it?

    • @joewearsadroolbib7347
      @joewearsadroolbib7347 Год назад +17

      That is a fun fact. 🤦🏻‍♂️

    • @joshuaswanson1977
      @joshuaswanson1977 Год назад +42

      Another fun fact: The wife of Stockton Rush, CEO of the company that built this submersible, is Wendy Rush. She is the great-great granddaughter of Isidor and Ida Straus who died on the Titanic. His body was later recovered but hers wasn't. This is a bit ironic since in this case, his body won't likely be recovered, while his wife's whereabouts are known.

    • @cerleywood
      @cerleywood Год назад +19

      @@c-qc-q2021I don’t think he’ll get his job back since they’re probably going out of business.

  • @bridgemannette3097
    @bridgemannette3097 Год назад +548

    Thank you to everyone who worked so hard to rescue the men ❤

    • @mrs.herculepoirot7763
      @mrs.herculepoirot7763 Год назад +21

      Thanks for saying that, God Bless them all.

    • @scottinnh88
      @scottinnh88 Год назад

      It was the USA and Canadian tax dollars at use for this rescue. So now the media will get right back to attacking Trump. It’s all to obvious. The gop had Biden cought for bribery they arrest Trump then sink a sub plus blow up a pipeline.

    • @davidherrera1643
      @davidherrera1643 Год назад +11

      You’re welcome

    • @drive7865
      @drive7865 Год назад +3

      if anything ,i would say a pay cut for them ,since they couldn't carried out a rescue .smh .

    • @Monkeezznuts
      @Monkeezznuts Год назад

      L bozo died 💀⚰️

  • @dianekeane7740
    @dianekeane7740 Год назад +2

    Okay, but now they are claiming that the crew had about a minute of sheer terror-piled atop one another at the front end-knowing they were about to die. They also claim that human remains have been recovered, so there is a fragment of body. Wondering what they will be backtracking on next.

  • @professorchaos5058
    @professorchaos5058 Год назад +196

    A wise man once said, "The arrogance of man is thinking nature is under our control and not the other way around." The ocean depths is part of nature

    • @jjfu301
      @jjfu301 Год назад

      LMAO!

    • @tinyikomaluleke3594
      @tinyikomaluleke3594 Год назад +4

      Well said

    • @DarkDepth1001
      @DarkDepth1001 Год назад

      man moves a single rock
      people : look at this ARROGANT man trying to defy nature, you cant touch anything or change anything it is not natural, rock cant move themsleves

    • @m.h.6499
      @m.h.6499 Год назад +3

      And from the filmed interviews of Rush dismissing the importance of safety, I’ve been been rendered speechless by the arrogance I saw in him.

    • @jonfreeman9682
      @jonfreeman9682 Год назад +3

      @@m.h.6499 he was warned by hundreds of people and his safety engineer and he fired anyone who disagrees. Hubris of the highest order.

  • @MikeLaRock88
    @MikeLaRock88 Год назад +44

    He was putting it lightly for the loved ones. He meant to say their bodies were crushed into mush, and we won't find anything of them because they were pretty much fish food this past week

  • @alecaquino4306
    @alecaquino4306 Год назад +233

    It's going to sound horrible... but I'm glad that this is how they met their end when compared to the alternative of being stuck in that coffin in the darkness of the bottom of the ocean for days on end waiting for a rescue that will likely never happen. This is a true tragedy but at least their suffering was brief.

    • @shawnmayer7849
      @shawnmayer7849 Год назад +33

      It was INATANTANEOUS. THERE WAS NO SUFFERING AT ALL.

    • @FreeAimDog
      @FreeAimDog Год назад +2

      but they are dead, they cant eat or orasm anymore, that ability is gone forever, forever

    • @donrumata1006
      @donrumata1006 Год назад +4

      i desagree

    • @philomenosupotanio1636
      @philomenosupotanio1636 Год назад +15

      @@FreeAimDog “orasm”? WTF do you mean?🤔🙄

    • @suzieparis6821
      @suzieparis6821 Год назад +1

      No one knows when or how it happened

  • @richard_zanormous3648
    @richard_zanormous3648 Год назад +2

    Nobody was on that sub. The passengers got legally erased. This was just a big scam.

  • @gdhaney136
    @gdhaney136 Год назад +781

    I grew up on a 34 ft sloop, sailing all over the Atlantic. The minute I heard they were missing, I knew they were gone. It broke my heart. The Admiral was beyond professional when he was asked about recovering remains. He just reminded everyone that it was a catastrophic event in an unforgiving environment. Reading between the lines, I knew what he meant, but thank you for just saying it. No soft language - just the facts.

    • @TheEnd-eg6wq
      @TheEnd-eg6wq Год назад +17

      You sailed and knew they were gone lol

    • @Bear-form
      @Bear-form Год назад

      ​@@TheEnd-eg6wqImagine asking questions about bodies after an implosion 3000 feet under the ocean.
      I would not be surprised if the knocking was a MSM lie to keep the clicks coming.
      "4000 feet down, 2 hours of air, ROV's just on site .. will they make it?"

    • @gdhaney136
      @gdhaney136 Год назад +73

      @@TheEnd-eg6wq Yup. Studied the ocean and diving my whole life. You?

    • @jamesmcniff5975
      @jamesmcniff5975 Год назад +7

      I never grew up on a sloop and I knew they were dead when I first heard, life experiences don't favour understanding admirals explaining a disaster with careful words think most of us read between the lines lol

    • @928pcar
      @928pcar Год назад

      James, he certainly has more knowledge than what’s in your tiny brain

  • @franciscolopez3229
    @franciscolopez3229 Год назад +550

    Very true, never under estimate the power of the sea even if it is calm. Condolences to the families who lost their loved ones.

    • @mikestrickhorn4132
      @mikestrickhorn4132 Год назад +1

      Shark attack?

    • @gilgamesh2293
      @gilgamesh2293 Год назад +5

      I remember going to the beach at night one day. The waves the ocean was making that day made respect and fear the ocean. That thing was furious and alive. I knew that if I go in there it would take me and that would be the end of me. And the ocean will still be splashing.

    • @h8marxists663
      @h8marxists663 Год назад +1

      Especially in a carbon fiber vessel at 12,000 ft below sea level. LOL!!

    • @champagnes5898
      @champagnes5898 Год назад +4

      @@gilgamesh2293you are absolutely right.. I went to Tybee Beach my first time ever at a beach and I went at night..I never saw something so beautiful yet so scary at the same time..the sound of the waves was so powerful truly an amazing experience for me. I never touch the water though..lol

    • @alejandroschmidt7346
      @alejandroschmidt7346 Год назад +3

      Well, the water pressure at that depth will be the same even if the sea is calm or not so your comment doesn't make much sense but whatever

  • @squarebear619
    @squarebear619 Год назад +770

    The fact that the young teen only went to please his silly father, who was, for some strange reason, obsessed with the Titanic, is so tragic. He was terrified, but since it was Father's Day weekend, he decided to please his father. Led his son to his ultimate demise, smh.

    • @dahole9393
      @dahole9393 Год назад +59

      not only did you use commas wrong throughout your whole statement, you also fail to realize that no one on board knew it would implode smh.

    • @XmatineeX
      @XmatineeX Год назад

      ​@@dahole9393This is an incredibly autistic comment

    • @Trance_OCE
      @Trance_OCE Год назад +393

      @@dahole9393 Arguing grammar but didn't even start your own sentence with a capitalization of the first word. Huge L.

    • @jimbrown9885
      @jimbrown9885 Год назад +36

      Silly men. If only they would have let women build and captain the sub, it would have been fine!

    • @CaraT1978
      @CaraT1978 Год назад +37

      @@dahole9393you also failed to use the coma correctly. It should me “implode (coma) smh”
      Implode, smh

  • @nathaniel4121
    @nathaniel4121 Год назад +5

    My son would never be allowed to go on a suicidal mission like this, scared or not. Some trips you go on your own and leave family out.

  • @andrewb.9815
    @andrewb.9815 Год назад +606

    The Titanic is the most infamous story of the dangers of oceanic travel, the irony of 5 people traveling to see it and dying because they ignored that cautionary tale. Its just plain hubris.

  • @F3502000
    @F3502000 Год назад +1093

    An airliner can plunge nose first into the ground and still find body parts. This just really puts it in perspective of how violent an implosion is at that depth. 😬

    • @pizzasmoothieyt
      @pizzasmoothieyt Год назад +127

      Damn you're right. I'm glad they didn't experience the amount of terror ppl in crashing airplanes experience. Those seconds while a plane is plummeting down have to be terrifying.

    • @IDABAYAREA650I
      @IDABAYAREA650I Год назад +7

      😬😬😬😬😬😬

    • @EOTA564
      @EOTA564 Год назад +52

      They didn’t recover bodies from the debris of the WTC. Occupants were ground into dust by the forces of the pancaking floors. They’d the best ground comparison for the forces involved.

    • @EOTA564
      @EOTA564 Год назад +35

      When an airplane nose dives into the ground there is an instant of incredibly violent deceleration forces. The difference here is that those forces are not contained in an instant, they are a constant. So you’re hitting the ground at 500mph in perpetuity.

    • @robinclaidlaw
      @robinclaidlaw Год назад +106

      @@EOTA564 It's not really that as such, it's just hugely more violent and from every direction. They weren't just squashed, the instant compression of the air inside the sub will have raised the temperature to over 1000c in an instant too. In effect, they were inside a bomb, instantly vapourised.

  • @mnirwin5112
    @mnirwin5112 Год назад +314

    His explanation of why recovery of the bodies is simply not feasible (4:09) is what the official in the press gathering was trying NOT to say. This is the cold and brutal truth: between the explosion and the time the remains have been down there ... there is, sadly, nothing left to collect.

    • @quest4adventure495
      @quest4adventure495 Год назад +35

      Fish food

    • @drpaulvfr3597
      @drpaulvfr3597 Год назад +27

      Its an implosion by the way👍🏿@ mnirwin5.

    • @dasboat64
      @dasboat64 Год назад +18

      A Submarine Captain knows exactly what they're talking about...

    • @ghostbird92
      @ghostbird92 Год назад +45

      Kind of annoying how they were trying to avoid saying that because it's not clear what they meant. When they say "unrecognizable" they could be referring to mangled bodies. This man tells it like it is, which I much prefer.

    • @yoshidinono8095
      @yoshidinono8095 Год назад +35

      You shouldn't spare feelings in this matter. The truth is better. I'm more pissed that reporters had to ask that dumb question.

  • @Christian_Girl120
    @Christian_Girl120 Год назад +79

    This was absolutely horrible. Too many times companies would rather save money than keep people safe. Now 5 people are dead. This is so heartbreaking. My condolences go out to the families.

    • @FlordePrimavera81
      @FlordePrimavera81 Год назад +7

      What also botters me is that the co-founder of Oceangate replied not to agree James Cameron when this one said he warned about how unsafe were these vehicles, saying that "certification doesn't mean safety"😮...well 5 lives lost are the proof of how unsafe Oceangate vehicles are🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @theremnantarmy.info-Phenix736
      @theremnantarmy.info-Phenix736 Год назад +1

      like ..epstein and other evil devil worshippers... faked their exit..while the 100+ yrs titanic sits pretty intact!!!.. do not believe the devil worshippers lot...LIARS!!!

    • @seananderson5334
      @seananderson5334 Год назад

      Although horrific, we need and have always had casualties when advancing technologies.

    • @lullemans72
      @lullemans72 Год назад +6

      i really don't feel sorry for this useless CEO. i just feel sorry that he had to take 4 other people with him.

    • @glenndavis7805
      @glenndavis7805 Год назад +1

      @@seananderson5334 HELLOOOOOO....IF THIS WAS EXPERIMENTAL WHY NOT DO A TRIAL RUN VIA REMOTE CONTROL

  • @Stratboy999
    @Stratboy999 Год назад +110

    The passengers would have been liquified instantly. Anything remaining would be dispersed by the current. They wouldn't have even known or felt anything about it which is the only comfort that can be taken from this. One second maybe wondering what that creaking sound was, the next gone.

    • @GrabbaBeer
      @GrabbaBeer Год назад +5

      There are no currents down at that level and they’d be more like partially cooked hamburger meat

    • @samscarletta7433
      @samscarletta7433 Год назад +11

      There ARE currents at that level. Wtf.

    • @Svedge
      @Svedge Год назад

      @@GrabbaBeer Heat and compression equals instant marine snow.

    • @stephenkalatucka6213
      @stephenkalatucka6213 Год назад

      @@Svedge chum. 🦀 🦀 🦀

    • @GrabbaBeer
      @GrabbaBeer Год назад +2

      @@samscarletta7433 no, there isn’t. Any movement in the water at that depth is so minimal you don’t even notice it. This is why the bottom of the ocean looks smooth like it has never been touched.
      The only thing similar to currents are higher up no where near the sea floor and is known as thermohaline circulation. Which is caused by water density, salinity, and temperature due to the drastic depth differences. These circulations have no physical impact on the sea floor. It’s the equivalent of standing in a hot parking lot with no wind. The air at parking lot level is still, but a ways above the parking lot, the heat rises and forms a plume of hot air rising out of nothing. Look it up

  • @KpopDiana
    @KpopDiana Год назад +197

    The Titan(ic) suffered the fate of saftey neglect. The father, who was well aware of the MAJOR risk, tagging his young son along is whats beyond me. Yes, we all take risks. But you cannot compare driving a car to diving into the depths of the ocean in a UNTESTED, UNCERTIFIED submarine! Its just not the same.

    • @billm4138
      @billm4138 Год назад +15

      Only 18 subs on the planet can reach these depths..1 had no certification..Now we have 17..

    • @Urko2005
      @Urko2005 Год назад +5

      Whats with all this young son , he was 19.

    • @NJW2913
      @NJW2913 Год назад +30

      @@Urko200518. And last time I checked that’s certainly not old.

    • @oleg758
      @oleg758 Год назад +3

      Yeap, but ocean gate says this sub has been designed and engineered by Boeing and NASA. Titan was made from carbon fiber. Ceo was on board.

    • @alisonholland7531
      @alisonholland7531 Год назад +1

      ​​@@NJW2913o but it's an adult and I'm sure he was excited to be doing it,an 18 year-old is not a child and this current society needs to stop treating adults like mindless children who can't make decisions for themselves - you've got some nerve attacking the father - Shame on you .

  • @lamajol
    @lamajol Год назад +98

    As I said in a comment on a previous article, this was the best possible outcome at this point. They didn't suffer, but died in the literal blink of an eye. That's much better than sitting at the bottom of the ocean floor in the cold dark for days, hungry and losing hope as your oxygen depletes, cognizant the entire time that the end is looming. And for those who laugh at this or believe it somehow justified, please remember that these were people, including a 19 year old young man-barely a man-who had families, employees, friends, and loved ones who depended on them. Those people have had to witness so many cruel comments over the past few days. Have a heart. Be human. These were human beings.

    • @jenniferoates3449
      @jenniferoates3449 Год назад +5

      Prays to the families this is so sad and as for people making memes and jokes about this tragedy your karma is coming it’s sickening how heartless some people are.

    • @NanaCottonNyan
      @NanaCottonNyan Год назад +2

      @@jenniferoates3449 Karma doesn't work that way

    • @catsrcool9746
      @catsrcool9746 Год назад +2

      That’s not karma.

    • @KrodaStagg
      @KrodaStagg Год назад +3

      Can we at least come to an agreement that it's a terrible idea to hire a crew based on wokeness and not actual qualifications? These people did not have to die, and skirting over the root cause of their demise is just making their deaths meaningless. Can we have common ground here, or do more people have to die? Can we all admit the inherit evil of wokeness or is that too much?

    • @missalphaomegagod-2u
      @missalphaomegagod-2u Год назад

      @@KrodaStagg😂 wokeness

  • @6611haggis
    @6611haggis Год назад +1

    The death of the Michael Biehn character from ‘The Abyss’ springs to mind.

  • @44dperez
    @44dperez Год назад +629

    Crazy to hear that the 19 year old was apparently terrified about going on the trip but went because it was a Father’s Day present for his dad. Just makes it that much sadder at least for him and his family.

    • @mg725
      @mg725 Год назад +49

      Ugh omg is that really true? Suleman didn't even want to go? How fucking sad....what a waste.

    • @Alejandro_87
      @Alejandro_87 Год назад +107

      @@mg725 according to his aunt, he saw it as an opportunity to bond with his (mega rich business man) father that probably wasn't around much if you know what I mean.

    • @branevans3705
      @branevans3705 Год назад +21

      A $250K gift for daddy

    • @happygrandma2732
      @happygrandma2732 Год назад +42

      So very sad, he wanted to bond with his father even though he was terrified.

    • @SlickArmor
      @SlickArmor Год назад +67

      Well they bonded that's for sure. They may have become one.

  • @Smileythesilent
    @Smileythesilent Год назад +796

    I was in the navy, you think about the possibilities going in, or you're too young to understand the reality but realise later. You know the chances and the outcomes and results for everyone left behind. When they said they lost contact, I knew the chances. Why do people underestimate nature? It's never lost.

    • @okamijubei
      @okamijubei Год назад +19

      Yeah but I also realize that since when I was a kid when my father was watching a documentary, when one of the naval submarines imploded while diving too deep under the ocean.

    • @sheryamiraslani6596
      @sheryamiraslani6596 Год назад +21

      Thought the same. Unfortunately, I wasn’t very optimistic about the outcome, when communication was totally gone.

    • @creatrixZBD
      @creatrixZBD Год назад +6

      She sure told those guys to hold her beer alright

    • @williejones6446
      @williejones6446 Год назад +33

      I was saying to people "That banging is the wreckage hitting the bottom of the ocean." not a single person believed me.

    • @Cagnaccioitalia
      @Cagnaccioitalia Год назад +7

      Because people were trying to hold out hope

  • @LeeEverett1
    @LeeEverett1 Год назад +199

    If you want a better idea on what happened to the bodies, look up "Mythbusters diving suit" where they put 135 psi on a suit with pig organs inside to demonstrate what it'd do to the human body. The result: Crushed the suit and the organs inside splattered everywhere into red goo.
    That was 135 psi, this sub was at *5000* psi. They wouldn't have felt a thing.

    • @eastbow6053
      @eastbow6053 Год назад +7

      oh man thanks havent seen one of their videos in a while

    • @robertmistkowski9879
      @robertmistkowski9879 Год назад +33

      That's honestly the best case scenario in a situation like that imagine running out of oxygen and just being trapped down there would be so much worse

    • @TheDisinformationProjectNz
      @TheDisinformationProjectNz Год назад +7

      I am going to check that out. Thanks

    • @kayvoigt1735
      @kayvoigt1735 Год назад +6

      Omg.. just went to see it. Really adds context to ir.

    • @samu-chan
      @samu-chan Год назад

      what is psi

  • @harpomarx7777
    @harpomarx7777 Год назад +491

    I sailed on submarines and we analyzed what would happen if our ship sank below collapse depth .. how rapidly death would come. What we came up with was in a very large hull such as a sub, when part of the hull is breached under high pressure, the air above the in-rushing water compresses in the sub and it skyrockets to incredible temperatures, such as in a diesel engine's cylinders, as the sea blasts in and blows down internal pressure bulkheads ... and anything flammable ignites well before the water reaches the upper areas. Bodies would crush and clothing would catch fire very quickly. Death would be very rapid.
    This is, of course, not the case with a small submersible. Implosion pulverizes anything living instantaneously.

    • @chitterlingsrtasty
      @chitterlingsrtasty Год назад +63

      Being a submariner seems terrifying

    • @firstnamerequiredlastnameo3473
      @firstnamerequiredlastnameo3473 Год назад +42

      Appalling to think of the many submarine crews during WW2 that suffered that fate. Even just sitting it out in a sub that was intact but unable to surface.

    • @aramirez8427
      @aramirez8427 Год назад +17

      Yup....The human body becomes fuel.......................

    • @edmundcharles5278
      @edmundcharles5278 Год назад +27

      The WW II subs only submerged a few hundred feet, so in those instances of a hull breach- drowning was a possible cause of death, but extreme sea decompression is something entirely different and quicker!

    • @fastone942
      @fastone942 Год назад +12

      USS scorpion and the USS thresher come to Mind, that sank from implosion in the 60s in the Atlantic

  • @danoyse8233
    @danoyse8233 Год назад +14

    This is a very sad and seemingly avoidable situation for all involved. My condolence to all family and friends. Excellent concise information from Captain David. Seems like a lot of negativity was rumoured prior to this voyage.

  • @dzed5579
    @dzed5579 Год назад +693

    I will never understand what goes through the mind of someone willing to pay a quarter of $1 million to sit in a cramped metal coffin to the bottom of the ocean just to look through a window the size of a dinner plate at a boat that sank 100 years ago. You couldn't pay me that amount (or any) to do anything like that.

    • @Kroiiz3
      @Kroiiz3 Год назад +49

      I think they couldn’t even look at the window because of the darkness. They would have only been able to watch it from a monitor.

    • @jayaramprabhu5595
      @jayaramprabhu5595 Год назад +14

      Well said.

    • @midnittkr
      @midnittkr Год назад

      Especially when you can already watch all the close up videos and camera stills that past explorations have compiled....the only reason to try and go there in person is 1 thing.....PURE EGO...to show everyone how much disposable income they have....well their heirs have it now

    • @QuietSquirrelClips
      @QuietSquirrelClips Год назад +32

      That just shows your lack of knowledge and how we human discover new things. And push the limits. If we didn’t have strong women and women willing to do this type of stuff there’s a lot we wouldn’t have figured out, use your brain just a little bit

    • @louievasquez2381
      @louievasquez2381 Год назад +25

      The same mindset people would skydive, hike mountains, bungee jump, etc.

  • @Martin.Wilson
    @Martin.Wilson Год назад +517

    OceanGate has a lot of explaining to do. They were warned about catastrophic safety problems with the sub at extreme depths in 2018 by their own Director of Marine Operations, David Lochridge. Lochridge was fired the same day and escorted off the premises. According to Lochridge, the passenger viewport was only certified for depths of up to 1,300 meters (4,265 feet), and OceanGate would not pay for the manufacturer to build a viewport certified for 4,000.meters (13,123 ft). The Titanic sits at a depth of 3,779 meters (12,400 ft). The outcome was inevitable.

    • @breakfast00club..11
      @breakfast00club..11 Год назад +51

      All because the Billionaire was Woke

    • @boxingenthusiast4016
      @boxingenthusiast4016 Год назад +16

      oceangate was stockton rush

    • @oldschool4456
      @oldschool4456 Год назад +82

      ​@breakfast00club..11 woke? No, he was greedy.

    • @karlb8069
      @karlb8069 Год назад

      And now comes the attempt from OceanGate and their attorneys to litigate and run damage control as they push the envelope of lying about it.

    • @shable1436
      @shable1436 Год назад +65

      ​@@oldschool4456these kids love using the same buzz words in any situation, they parrot others and make no sense

  • @AmandaGemini
    @AmandaGemini Год назад +391

    I hate that they passed away put I am relieved to know they did not suffer because it happened so quickly.
    I remember when I was training to be a life guard having to dive to the bottom of a 12 foot pool to touch a sandbag dummy and even at that depth it was hard to go down and not feel the pressure on your body, in your ears, and my lungs felt like they were on fire and going to burst!
    Edit: It was 5 lbs to test us to see if we could touch it at the bottom. Yes sand because I grew up in a poor neighborhood in Memphis TN it was all we had!
    YOUR WELCOME TO THE TROLLS WHO LIKE TO MOCK THE POOR, IMPOVRISHED AND LESS FORTUNATE!

    • @jessemorehead7050
      @jessemorehead7050 Год назад +17

      They most definitely suffered mentally I don't know what use words but this is really sad I can't breathe just thinking about it

    • @mikemckee6583
      @mikemckee6583 Год назад +96

      @@jessemorehead7050I don’t think you’re comprehending the instantaneous nature of an implosion at that depth. They didn’t have even a millisecond to comprehend what was happening, much less to “suffer mentally.” As was said, the most merciful outcome under the circumstances.

    • @neeneediamond2959
      @neeneediamond2959 Год назад +23

      The more important question is where are their souls now? Heaven is a real place but so is Hell.

    • @danhillman4523
      @danhillman4523 Год назад +6

      12 feet? lol.

    • @Dr.Ticklebum69
      @Dr.Ticklebum69 Год назад +24

      ​@@neeneediamond2959why in the world is this relevant to you? THAT'S the most important question you can come up with?

  • @eatmorecoleslaw
    @eatmorecoleslaw Год назад +1

    “The sea was angry that day“ ~G. Costanza

  • @userused3199
    @userused3199 Год назад +88

    I saw a comment somewhere today that has stuck w/me. Something like "The ocean has a long record of dealing harshly with human hubris." May they rest in peace and may the families find some solace in the fact that they didn't suffer.

    • @johno1544
      @johno1544 Год назад +4

      A good way to put it

    • @respectfulconversation944
      @respectfulconversation944 Год назад +1

      I think i saw the same comment. Something like the sea has a good track record defeating human hubris. Something like that.

    • @marilynyoung8477
      @marilynyoung8477 Год назад +1

      And they were doing something they loved and enjoyed

    • @CraigGrant-sh3in
      @CraigGrant-sh3in Год назад +3

      @@marilynyoung8477 No ,they were doing something that their riches allowed them to do that most others couldn't .No different than all of the bodies that are on top of Everest

    • @kellymcclendon6601
      @kellymcclendon6601 Год назад

      Human hubris?

  • @scottbaxendale323
    @scottbaxendale323 Год назад +259

    One of the most insane things was that once they were down to the titanic they could only see any of it through a video monitor mounted inside the sub. This is the dumbest unnecessary risk I’ve ever heard, when they could have sent a robot with a camera down there and controlled it with a video game controller while they sat above water on the ship drinking cocktails and watched it on a identical monitor on the mother ship.

    • @lovejoy4559
      @lovejoy4559 Год назад +21

      There was a window

    • @batcactus6046
      @batcactus6046 Год назад +8

      The same, equally insane, video controller that directed the craft.

    • @danielb2744
      @danielb2744 Год назад +25

      The submersible had a window to look out of, it was not rated for those depths according to an ex-employee. But this submersible had a few journeys down already. Most likely stress fatigue caused a catastrophic flaw, and the weak point destroyed the ship.

    • @adewale8759
      @adewale8759 Год назад +4

      I think no radio signals can travel that distance through water

    • @Yellodaise13
      @Yellodaise13 Год назад +5

      What are you talking about. Clearly you don’t know what your talking about. There was no monitor. There was a window.

  • @justdoingitjim7095
    @justdoingitjim7095 Год назад +219

    The former employee who initially raised the alarm about the sub being unsafe, said the sub itself might've been certified for a depth of 13,000 feet, but the portal used to look outside was only certified for 1,300 feet! The Titanic is around 12,500 feet. I feel most sorry for the boy who accompanied his dad.

    • @bugsbunnypoo
      @bugsbunnypoo Год назад +6

      Same

    • @SHAWNEESKYWALKER
      @SHAWNEESKYWALKER Год назад +7

      I feel sorry for the young man too.

    • @benjurqunov
      @benjurqunov Год назад +1

      But why didn't that neglect serve to defend special homosexual rights ?
      They weren't anywhere near mexico !

    • @LToONG33
      @LToONG33 Год назад

      lookup JAY FLY RED - Will You Remember in the search bar because your memory serves you well ! lolc

    • @stevek8829
      @stevek8829 Год назад +8

      They said 1300 meters, not feet.

  • @hmonster1XL
    @hmonster1XL Год назад +2

    The sub company says the are grieving…………..”deeply” 😂😅

  • @pozzee2809
    @pozzee2809 Год назад +151

    The poor 19 year old didn’t feel good about going, but since it was Father’s Day weekend he wanted to please his father 😢😢😢.
    The adults made a life choice, the teenager relied on their judgment 😢😢😢

    • @Zesurfer
      @Zesurfer Год назад

      you have no idea what you're talking about, have more respect

    • @zoehannah6278
      @zoehannah6278 Год назад

      His father was an utter idiot and he's responsible for his son's death.

    • @sl4983
      @sl4983 Год назад +9

      Yes, so sad that the father would take that chance with his son

    • @ReginaldZero
      @ReginaldZero Год назад +9

      @@sl4983 Might not have understood the safety issues. Might have been too excited to consider them.

    • @tomriley5790
      @tomriley5790 Год назад +3

      @@ReginaldZero excited is one word... it's very tragic.

  • @Questor-ky2fv
    @Questor-ky2fv Год назад +189

    I'm very sorry about how this incident ended.😞 I really wanted them to be rescued. My heart goes out to their family and friends, and to those who tried to rescue them.😞

    • @atomicwedgie8176
      @atomicwedgie8176 Год назад +4

      I am heartbroken for the families' loss and look forward to them receiving the bill for this recovery operation.

    • @travisgoesthere
      @travisgoesthere Год назад +4

      😅

    • @SHAWNEESKYWALKER
      @SHAWNEESKYWALKER Год назад +2

      😊😅

    • @LToONG33
      @LToONG33 Год назад +1

      lookup JAY FLY RED - Will You Remember in the search bar because your memory serves you well ! lolc

  • @Lovesapuzzle
    @Lovesapuzzle Год назад +153

    From what is now being reported about the fragility of the sub and that it had never been tested at those depths, it is amazing that anyone would have thought this dive was a good idea.

    • @ktorn1
      @ktorn1 Год назад +39

      It was actually its 3rd dive to the Titanic, but like experts pointed out, the problem is that repeated dives put the vessel under stress and it can slowly damage the vessel until it breaks. This is where the sub's design is being questioned.

    • @shawndouglass2939
      @shawndouglass2939 Год назад +9

      You could not have paid me enough to go deep down in that basket-case 😢

    • @LToONG33
      @LToONG33 Год назад

      lookup JAY FLY RED - Will You Remember in the search bar because your memory serves you well ! lolc

    • @robertsmith2956
      @robertsmith2956 Год назад +1

      Sticking your butt out the window for toilet. Reminds me of Black Adder.

    • @Joya_Day
      @Joya_Day Год назад

      ​@@ktorn1Was it only the 3rd time for this vessel in particular? I thought they've brought 70 people to see it so far. Maybe it was 70 people in total that have ever been down there to see the Titanic. Too many articles lately on this lol

  • @thelastjohnwayne
    @thelastjohnwayne Год назад +321

    Never underestimate the Oceans. I have always respected the Oceans and the older I get the more I respect them.

    • @dhkw007
      @dhkw007 Год назад

      Just respect all aspect of nature. Humans cant control or be a match to nature

    • @ovoxo7835
      @ovoxo7835 Год назад +27

      too many souls down there they do not want to be disturbed

    • @g.o.1984
      @g.o.1984 Год назад +6

      The world only has one ocean...

    • @Spoopy_man
      @Spoopy_man Год назад +13

      ​@@ovoxo7835More like the laws of physics don't want you down there.

    • @OS1540
      @OS1540 Год назад +12

      Never want to underestimate any wild environment. The Oceans, the jungle, the desert, the skies, there's many unforgiving ways to be taken out by these habitats if you're not careful

  • @JG-ef4ut
    @JG-ef4ut Год назад +245

    Sadly, in a cruel twist of irony, these men who sought to explore the wreck of the Titanic, have now become a permanent part of it. Rest in peace gentlemen.

    • @justayoutuber1906
      @justayoutuber1906 Год назад +15

      They are "resting" inside the stomachs of crabs

    • @Kingfisher276
      @Kingfisher276 Год назад +11

      Expensive way to die

    • @krystinas8828
      @krystinas8828 Год назад +12

      Rest in peace like the people who died on the Titanic whose graves they were trying to sightsee?

    • @Hatbox948
      @Hatbox948 Год назад +3

      Very well said!

    • @dingdong2103
      @dingdong2103 Год назад +7

      Well the CEO did claim the Titan was unsinkable and it wasn't a bad omen at all to name the vessel according to the space rocket which killed all of its crew on the launch pad.

  • @ladyfembo5165
    @ladyfembo5165 Год назад +11

    My heart goes out to the families. It's heartbreaking 💔

  • @lunaazul3000
    @lunaazul3000 Год назад +311

    This lady news reporter talks with an unnerving smile on her face like she's about to giggle at any moment. Such sad and tragic news.

    • @nikikuki1
      @nikikuki1 Год назад +89

      I was looking for a comment like this, why the hell is she smiling????

    • @debbieallen3861
      @debbieallen3861 Год назад +53

      I was thinking the same...

    • @stellaekkeshis5698
      @stellaekkeshis5698 Год назад +41

      It’s creeping me out!

    • @roonilwazlib3089
      @roonilwazlib3089 Год назад +13

      Polished... idk made it feel fake, maybe my tinfoil hat is too tight.

    • @c.t.4837
      @c.t.4837 Год назад +10

      I was JUST GOING TO SAY THAT

  • @jhOO7
    @jhOO7 Год назад +687

    Sadly, this tragedy was avoidable. People's lives came at the cost of shortcuts. Condolences to the families of the deceased.

    • @humanbeing4841
      @humanbeing4841 Год назад +10

      The crew was well aware of the risks and signed a waver with everything in mind.

    • @Daz555Daz
      @Daz555Daz Год назад +24

      @@humanbeing4841 They would not have been aware that the Titan was a death trap.

    • @OnGod1007
      @OnGod1007 Год назад +11

      ​@Daz555Daz The Submersible used a third-party Playstation controller to operate death trap

    • @dc2gsr1997
      @dc2gsr1997 Год назад +21

      @@humanbeing4841 they said in the interview that the sub went on multiple trips with our being serviced. That’s not the passengers fault it’s the company’s fault for not doing regular maintenance on there craft

    • @dc2gsr1997
      @dc2gsr1997 Год назад +5

      @@OnGod1007 it was using a Logitech controller

  • @DDee-oi6kn
    @DDee-oi6kn Год назад +441

    God bless the agencies involved in finding this sub. Don't know how old this sub was, but I can imagine the stress on the sub's structure increased each time it went down.

    • @mattwells5022
      @mattwells5022 Год назад +31

      It was that window I'm sure we will find out

    • @NavyVet4955
      @NavyVet4955 Год назад +45

      @@mattwells5022I'd bet it was the epoxy bond between the titanium hemispheres and carbon fiber hull. Those heads expand and contract with temperature changes. Given the frigid temperatures at those depths the heads were in a shrinking cycle.

    • @lunamaria1048
      @lunamaria1048 Год назад +29

      @@mattwells5022 The debris found shows a catastrophic implosion of the haul, not a failure of the window. The haul was carbon fiber and not even depth tested

    • @lorrainewilson5234
      @lorrainewilson5234 Год назад +7

      Totally agree with you and my guess is he never changed all the bolts on the return of each voyage

    • @okabe9545
      @okabe9545 Год назад +41

      It was not old, it was just poorly designed, a lot of negligence as well.

  • @rclanglais5263
    @rclanglais5263 Год назад +1

    I saw a story in the British news, where refugees are comparing their boats sinking to this. “Where were the westerner rescue ships coming to save them”, well for one thing, this submersible was registered and every passenger was documented!

  • @blessedone843
    @blessedone843 Год назад +142

    I think that we shouldn't go near the Titanic wreckage to veiw it as a tourist attraction. Because it's a graveyard to over 1,500 people who passed away in that same location. My condolences to the families and friends who lost their loved ones in this Titan tragedy.😞

    • @boxingenthusiast4016
      @boxingenthusiast4016 Год назад +15

      the whole world is a grave yard

    • @Isaac-eh6uu
      @Isaac-eh6uu Год назад +7

      Don't we go to graveyards all the time and we even keep burying.

    • @nadia4999
      @nadia4999 Год назад +10

      The fascination of seeing ship wreckage is beyond me. They won’t stop. These jokers still looking for the city of Atlantis.

    • @williammartinez840
      @williammartinez840 Год назад +2

      The science of submersibles needs to be improved a hundred fold before this type of venture should be allowed again.

    • @Isaac-eh6uu
      @Isaac-eh6uu Год назад +2

      @@williammartinez840 submersibles need to have easy recovery ready at the top as well. Submersibles can't move much on their own compared to a submarine failures are bound to happen. Submersibles also need to be way more resilient than the standards that are already in place.

  • @ericheine2414
    @ericheine2414 Год назад +157

    Congratulations to the International Community coming together and making an effort to save these people's lives. You guys are incredible. Thank you for all you do. Godspeed.

    • @jermainehudson3969
      @jermainehudson3969 Год назад

      Plot twist they assuming....they are to scared an they really dont want to know what really happen they just want the vessel....dont believe me watch how it plays out...the vessel will be soon recover with not a peice of evidence of a human flesh in it.....this is all about MONEY AN NEW TECHNOLOGY

    • @deejs8652
      @deejs8652 Год назад +3

      Here,here,bravo!!!

    • @kellymcclendon6601
      @kellymcclendon6601 Год назад +5

      Congratulations?
      Are you serious?
      Well, you just won the next ticket.

    • @rob5197
      @rob5197 Год назад

      People in distress where ever they find themself efforts to rescue them is a duty - - often requires international efforts nothing out of the ordinary

    • @StevenCarinci
      @StevenCarinci Год назад

      They did the same thing for Apollo 13.

  • @TotalWealth
    @TotalWealth Год назад +174

    I’m amazed they didn’t mention that OceanGate FIRED the key employee who repeatedly warned this very thing could happen!!!
    He did not feel the hull could continue to withstand the pressures. His repeated verbal warnings we’re ignored, so he put it in writing. The next day, he was fired, and then the company SUED him!
    Then, Stockton rush, the CEO, said in an interview he didn’t want to hire any more “50 year old white guys” from the military with submarine experience… he wanted young “inspirational” adventures and hired 25-year-old people he could train, and they would not ask him any tough questions.
    (The guy they fired had extensive military submarine experience and was demanding further testing.)
    Sadly, I’m sure people felt “safe” that the CEO had the confidence to go on this trip himself! But he was a fool who ignored warning signs and didn’t want to listen to the experts!

    • @peggytoes99
      @peggytoes99 Год назад +16

      Yep ... ones who play nintendo and have an extra controller laying around. WHAT were they thinking?

    • @ghostbird92
      @ghostbird92 Год назад +2

      Every other video on this story already mentions that.

    • @cliffdwelling3807
      @cliffdwelling3807 Год назад +2

      Now Mr. Rush is Mr. Jello.

    • @julse.289
      @julse.289 Год назад +20

      He was greedy! Bottom line... Unfortunately, that old white man knew what he was talking about!

    • @lorrainemcdonald7982
      @lorrainemcdonald7982 Год назад

      Hmm🤔

  • @jamesrobert4106
    @jamesrobert4106 Год назад +1

    The Oceans are not underestimated. The stupidity of people is.

  • @earlycuyler4019
    @earlycuyler4019 Год назад +245

    This tragedy could have been prevented, so long as the owner didn’t prioritize “inspiration” over safety and an experienced crew.

    • @StevenCarinci
      @StevenCarinci Год назад

      Go woke go dead.

    • @DP-eo5xd
      @DP-eo5xd Год назад +31

      It’s what the hoodie wearing tech bros do. Ignore the rules, break things, innovate! Sadly this buffoon took people with him.

    • @kthx1138
      @kthx1138 Год назад

      Indeed. That moron CEO had his priorities in the wrong place.

    • @jb6712
      @jb6712 Год назад +2

      I never understand why anyone has to make the statement "this could have been prevented..." when it's all over and done, there's nothing more to do, everyone is worn out emotionally, and now the investigation will be started. Why can't people just keep such opinions to themselves rather than make others feel terrible?

    • @ericnowak9497
      @ericnowak9497 Год назад

      @@jb6712Because they’re jackasses who want to ride high atop the wave of perceived validation for their own beliefs instead of showing some sympathy at least for the family members of the deceased. Nothing ranks above proving that they know best.

  • @bornontherimofchaos
    @bornontherimofchaos Год назад +638

    The only thing I find consoling is that the passengers didn't know what happened and hopefully didn't feel anything. My condolences to the families that lost their loved ones.

    • @AntonyTCurtis
      @AntonyTCurtis Год назад +65

      The nerves in their skin would not have had enough time to relay the pain to their brain before the brain itself was destroyed. The air in the cabin would be crushed so fast, it would briefly become exceedingly hot, their clothes could instantly combust and explode.

    • @Primal_Traders
      @Primal_Traders Год назад +17

      @@AntonyTCurtis can you explain how it would become so hot inside the vessel? I get the water pressure is so strong that they will be crushed instantly, but how does the heat work?

    • @BigTexGuitarz
      @BigTexGuitarz Год назад +19

      they definitely felt everything

    • @talaverajr391
      @talaverajr391 Год назад +54

      ​@@Primal_TradersWater moves through the air so quickly (because of pressure) that it literally causes friction between the air and water. This friction causes heat.

    • @mssha1980
      @mssha1980 Год назад

      @@Primal_Tradersfrom what it has to do with pressure

  • @StephASMR
    @StephASMR Год назад +74

    I’m glad that there has been a resolution. I can’t imagine how horrendous it’s been for their families this whole time, wondering if they’re ok. It would of course have been amazing for them to have been found alive (although seems to be an almost impossible outcome). The fact that this would have been instantaneous is preferable to the alternative.

    • @horkfordshire627
      @horkfordshire627 Год назад +1

      Lmao no they went to blink 182. They're woke they don't care

    • @Halloqween_13
      @Halloqween_13 Год назад

      ​@@horkfordshire627I don't think woke means what you all think it means... also that was one guy who went.

    • @horkfordshire627
      @horkfordshire627 Год назад

      @@Halloqween_13 i like blink 182

  • @JeezWhiz1
    @JeezWhiz1 Год назад +1

    Instantaneous death without warning is better than a slow death via suffocation.

  • @girlee0303
    @girlee0303 Год назад +635

    My sadness lies in the stupidity of the person who allowed this to happen and for the young 19-year-old who was terrified of doing this but went because of his father and now he’s no longer with us my condolences to his family this is a horrible tragedy that didn’t need to happen if rules were followed

    • @elizafaulhammer2203
      @elizafaulhammer2203 Год назад +47

      Yes, this boy is a victim!

    • @Cindee-Schnitman
      @Cindee-Schnitman Год назад +17

      Yes; that’s tragic to lose your kid.

    • @92cgray
      @92cgray Год назад +42

      There was another father and son who weeks earlier changed their minds about going on when they saw the Sub. That father listened to his son I wonder why this father insisted on still going? They had money they could afford another time when it was safer.

    • @davidseanmacdonald1470
      @davidseanmacdonald1470 Год назад +4

      I agree 💯%

    • @jorvikaengelskvinna7157
      @jorvikaengelskvinna7157 Год назад +13

      @@92cgray Yes. I feel sick to my stomach about this young man.

  • @ethan073
    @ethan073 Год назад +87

    Glad he said that. I was confused when reporters were asking about recovering bodies. Seems like “catastrophic implosion at pressures of 5000 pounds per square inch” would be explicit enough for everybody, but I guess not.

    • @anthonyxuereb792
      @anthonyxuereb792 Год назад +7

      Unfortunately "everybody" doesn't include news reporters who repeatedly asked banal, stupid and infuriating questions, it's a part of their trade.

    • @apples8872
      @apples8872 Год назад +7

      They ask the obvious questions for the “viewers” that don’t understand

    • @anthonyxuereb792
      @anthonyxuereb792 Год назад +2

      @@apples8872 There's a lot of them

    • @GTI8855
      @GTI8855 Год назад

      There are bodies somewhere. But it's pointless to try to find them.

    • @SamuraiPie8111
      @SamuraiPie8111 Год назад +7

      @@GTI8855 they were turned into goo. there aren't remains to recover.

  • @Okenpo
    @Okenpo Год назад +447

    Attempting to grasp just how much force their bodies succumbed to is mind blowing. It’s like something off a sci-fi film.

    • @damienkearns3654
      @damienkearns3654 Год назад +43

      We don't have to always look at Sci-Fi movies, the scientific ACTUAL reality is plenty enough - they were reduced to gel.

    • @michaelaustin334
      @michaelaustin334 Год назад +40

      Actually they were vaporized in less than a millisecond.

    • @Zerifu
      @Zerifu Год назад +45

      ​@RepentandbelieveinJesusChrist bla bla bla

    • @zephrynk9693
      @zephrynk9693 Год назад +35

      ​@@michaelaustin334Well, they weren't actually vaporized. Any noticeable damage to their bodies would have been from the force of the implosion coupled with whatever the fragmented vessel did to them. Ofcor,any air-filled cavities such as lungs. Sinuses, etc were instantaneously compressed by the great pressure. I would imagine they were torn asunder by the force of the implosion and fragments of metal and carbon-fiber.

    • @dswill3709
      @dswill3709 Год назад +20

      there’s a film i watched a few years back that gave me a great sense of how much pressure it is we’re talking about, it’s called “Underwater” it’s cool if you wanna see someone’s body instantly vaporize from the pressure. extremely scary, but your body just crushes before you can blink and all that’s left is blood in the water. It’s pretty cool!

  • @baosam5053
    @baosam5053 Год назад +4

    I'm glad I am claustrophobic couldn't pay to be inside that sub, rest in peace to all of them

  • @anneturner4709
    @anneturner4709 Год назад +46

    What a terribly sad thing to happen. Have been following this from New Zealand. DEEPEST SYMPATHY TO ALL THE FAMILY.

    • @billp4
      @billp4 Год назад +2

      Good one 😀🤣😅

  • @carlasalas9374
    @carlasalas9374 Год назад +50

    It doesnt make it any less painful or sad for their families, these people STILL lost their lives n loved ones are still here to relive it every day

    • @Fodi48
      @Fodi48 Год назад +5

      People live and people die. I’m sure the loved ones would prefer a painless death than a painful death, given the circumstances.

    • @rustneversleeps85
      @rustneversleeps85 Год назад +3

      Well it actually kind of does make in less painful and sad. Would yo rather your loved one dies in horrible pain and agony , or instantly? The latter is way easier to come to terms with and process emotionally.

    • @GullibleTarget
      @GullibleTarget Год назад

      Wow. That is so profound and deep. I might give this a like

  • @kennethkendrick4795
    @kennethkendrick4795 Год назад +221

    After 111 years, the Titanic claims five more victims. May they rest in peace.

    • @michaelmage9627
      @michaelmage9627 Год назад +38

      The Titanic is blameless. Get a grip. What claimed those five people was colossal hubris. Nothing to celebrate here.

    • @maroof1
      @maroof1 Год назад +3

      Jesus, you are a grim reaper

    • @mikemcguinness1304
      @mikemcguinness1304 Год назад

      Its there stupidly, not the titanic

    • @jaynekranc8607
      @jaynekranc8607 Год назад +1

      The Titanic had nothing to do with it. It was going down in an experimental ship.

    • @apeshot93
      @apeshot93 Год назад +2

      ​@@michaelmage9627Theirs everything to celebrate you play stupid games you paid with your life 😂😂

  • @ripemm5737
    @ripemm5737 Год назад +1

    I find that just watching videos of the titanic is good enough for me

  • @lauralaladarling3775
    @lauralaladarling3775 Год назад +27

    I agree, the interviewer had the most unfortunate manner and smile on her face that she seemed unable to control; it was dreadful. She appeared to have no empathy for the lost souls on the Titan sub and didn't even offer condolences to the families. She was positively up-beat; very disturbing.

    • @Luke-zj6ge
      @Luke-zj6ge Год назад +2

      She may just be nervous too

    • @axgelbxnny
      @axgelbxnny Год назад

      yeah not a good interviewer

    • @salvadoranmood503
      @salvadoranmood503 Год назад +1

      I've noticed that as well, she doesn't show any empathy to that eerie explanation of how these poor people passed away unfortunately. I'm not sure if she behaves like this the whole news emission though, either way may those people rest in peace.

    • @calinator51
      @calinator51 Год назад

      ​@Luke-zj6ge Absolutely could be an anxious reaction but it makes her look callous.

  • @spencer7176
    @spencer7176 Год назад +72

    I never thought I would say this, but I’m glad it emploded. It would be an instant painless death opposed to the other options of slowly suffocating. Sad story overall though(

  • @chorlauheung4920
    @chorlauheung4920 Год назад +110

    Condolences to the families of all the occupants on this submersible. Tragic irony! They came to see a historic wreckage. But, they became part of a historic wreckage.

    • @paustin47able
      @paustin47able Год назад +4

      Wasn't one of the victims a born descendant of the victims of the Titanic?

    • @peter-pg5yc
      @peter-pg5yc Год назад +1

      wht feel sorrry for peoples that did sign offs to , who knew the danger, and still went. like that big mountain lots die on that every year.. if one knows the risk and still participates whatever..

    • @Mastervading4306
      @Mastervading4306 Год назад

      ​@offroadguy7772The CEO will teach them about diversity hirings

    • @SilverXTikal
      @SilverXTikal Год назад

      @offroadguy7772 Believing in ghosts and fantasizing about what they’re doing fresh after the death of these people is not a good hope bro

  • @joycejones3361
    @joycejones3361 Год назад +5

    This is so messed up! My heart ❤️ goes out to the family left behind at home! I pray that they can find some healing in time!

  • @acoustixminor87
    @acoustixminor87 Год назад +500

    The implosion of a carbon fiber/metal/glass enclosure at this depth of the ocean is equivalent to the fastest and most efficient blender ever invented. There’s nothing left, and my heart is so broken for their family.

    • @JimmyPizzaDelivery
      @JimmyPizzaDelivery Год назад +63

      Human Smoothies, it's what's for dinner.
      - microbes probably

    • @xxwoman
      @xxwoman Год назад +28

      I’ve heard the collapse of the Twin Towers described the same way. Like a blender.

    • @kyohiromitsu4010
      @kyohiromitsu4010 Год назад +13

      I wonder why did they make a carbon fiber tube. Plastic +fibers are a NO

    • @davidwhitten3596
      @davidwhitten3596 Год назад +36

      More like jamming your whole body in a sewing thimble in a thousandth of a second

    • @helloyou_wave
      @helloyou_wave Год назад +2

      @@xxwoman dang 😔

  • @lunamaria1048
    @lunamaria1048 Год назад +80

    The Titanic wants to be left alone to rest in peace. We should respect mass grave sites, not dig them up and study them.

    • @MJ-we9vu
      @MJ-we9vu Год назад +9

      They weren't trying to study anything. They were rich people on a sightseeing tour.

    • @dianemelick2393
      @dianemelick2393 Год назад +2

      I agree with you The Titanic is on the ocean floor That is where so many people perished let them rest in peace It's almost like the Titanic is cursed if you will just look what happened

    • @dianemelick2393
      @dianemelick2393 Год назад

      My comment is for Luna Maria

    • @lindap.p.1337
      @lindap.p.1337 Год назад +1

      I see no harm in investigating the Titanic, but it must he done safely. Obviously we are not ready.

    • @wilbertkendal2524
      @wilbertkendal2524 Год назад +4

      More like the Titanic wants more victims.

  • @kevinbreese5739
    @kevinbreese5739 Год назад +43

    This is the best case scenario given the circumstances. Obviously we all hoped for a miracle rescue but as strange or cold as it may sound, this was the next best thing. It was highly disturbing to me thinking of the sheer mental anguish and suffering they must be going thru in that tiny vessel with an eventual end being suffocation. They were spared such a horrible fate and instead passed instantly with zero suffering.

    • @corneliuscrewe677
      @corneliuscrewe677 Год назад +6

      I agree, I’ve really been troubled by the thought of those people trapped in that tiny death trap with air slowly running out and freezing.

    • @LToONG33
      @LToONG33 Год назад +1

      lookup JAY FLY RED - Will You Remember in the search bar because your memory serves you well ! lolc

  • @NOWOKEXYZ
    @NOWOKEXYZ Год назад +1

    At over 400 Atmospheres of Pressure it was faster than you can snap your fingers! R.I.P!

  • @danmusk8030
    @danmusk8030 Год назад +36

    One of the things I read that surprised me the most was that, in fact, they did not even have a security or rescue protocol, that is, that in the best of cases, if they had miraculously been able to float to the surface, due to some technical difficulty, they would have died of suffocation on the fourth day, because the hatch could only be opened from the outside and not from the inside, it was a real death trap that claimed the lives of 5 people, including a young man who did not even want to get on at first but for accompanying his father he also ended up dying :(

    • @dead_on_departure
      @dead_on_departure Год назад +1

      The engineer who was fired actually managed to escape his former company's possible "catastrophic implosion".

  • @tshaffer9681
    @tshaffer9681 Год назад +526

    My deepest condolences to the families and friends. I feel especially sorry for the young man's mother. Unfortunately with something this catastrophic there would be no bodies to recover.

    • @davidmg1925
      @davidmg1925 Год назад +34

      Not really. they were a bunch of rubber neckers with more money than sense.
      Would you ahve yourself bolted into a tin can like that?
      They knew the risks: their families new the risks.
      Theyy also new the track record of these dives was awful and the the su istelf was a driven by x box controller: quite true!!!
      Now go figure.

    • @johngonzo9671
      @johngonzo9671 Год назад +32

      She's devastated, she wrote book on her anxiety after being in a plane with her Pakistan husband that was plunging. That is was able to land. But she never recovered she thought they were going to die. And he was her rock , and that's her son also. She is devastated. We see this on the news , but imagine If that was our Loved one. Just remember that feeling when someone we loved either left us or broke our heart. That's a feeling ten times that. That's why I don't watch the news unfortunately RUclips shows these things. Very sad !! Rest In Peace 🙏 and I hope and pray the ones left behind cab find peace of mind. Because there will be a lot of tears, sleepless nights and pain.

    • @shnoopydoopy6707
      @shnoopydoopy6707 Год назад +22

      i dont get it why does everyone act like they care about their lives once theres a big news story about it just because its a submarine. Yet there are thousands of people that die in car accidents and war and not a peep about condolences for those people.

    • @Sandi-ke9mi
      @Sandi-ke9mi Год назад +5

      @@davidmg1925I’m with you on that.

    • @dotconnector3889
      @dotconnector3889 Год назад +5

      ​@@davidmg1925come on man...have some respect...it was a knock off ps1 controller, not an xbox controller. They wouldn't touch an xbox controller, they are not that low, pardon the pun.