Search and rescue operation is still under way to find the $250,000 per person Titanic tourist submersible. It has been missing for nearly two days in the Atlantic Ocean with five people aboard who are believed to have around 40 hours of oxygen left.
I've seen theories floated about such as a rapid implosion or that power went out and they are trapped at the bottom of the ocean. Others have suggested that it is a grift, distraction or sabotage to disappear someone. So far there has been no sign of the sub.
I find strange that a submersible designed to dive so deep would be controlled by a PlayStation controller and have all of the vital internal components hidden - also that there was no tether attached to it or sonar just in case such an event occurred. I'm no Sub expert so I could be way off.
Curious to know others thoughts on the matter.
Glad you asked. It's actually really key to understanding how the whole picture comes together.
There was a book written in 1897 (IIRC, which was 15 years before the sinking) called, "Futility or, The Wreck of the Titan". The storyline contains dozens of parallels to the supposed real-life sinking of the Titanic. You can easily search this up and the list is beyond startling. Okay, so the existence of the book needs an explanation, right?
There are a number of candidates: "All a big coinkydink!", "The author was a time-traveler or could see into the future!", "Synchromysticism!", or maybe, "Proof we live in a simulation and the alien programmers are fucking with us!" Well okay, but I think anyone will admit those are pretty far-fetched.
The alternative scenario is that "They" had this old Tartarian ship, eventually to be named the Titanic, that they wanted to fake the sinking of. Why? Who the hell can be sure with these occult wingnuts and their lunacy. But in any case they had the script in mind at least 15 years ahead of time.
As They always love to taunt us with their superiority by foreshadowing events, they publish this novel that actually contains the scheme. Then 15 years later, well... they simply execute. No coincidences, no time-travel, no synchromysticism, nothing of the kind necessary.
So as wild as the claims of a Tartarian ship, a hoax sinking, and a hoax tourist sub may seem at first blush, at least there's a big pile of evidence to examine. With the other kooky explanations for the book "Futility", there's no evidence to examine at all.