Dali container ship seems to be insured by Lloyd.
Before 2022 Lloyd premiums from ship insurance was at around two dozen billions a year. Today, after unsealing that thing in maritime law that allow ships be insured by state of registration backed insurance company, Lloyd already lost billions of their premiums, so current sum is much lower.
Baltimor disaster estimated up to dozen billions. Since ship was a cause of distater, Lloyd have to pay that and it is significant sum that could bankrupt Lloyd, at least in ship insurance area. So they will have to borrow money from other branches. But that's not looks good too.
Total Lloyd premiums are around 60 billions a year. Let's assume that half of that sum used for Lloyd realty bills, salaries, top managers pockets filling and all that stuff. Then there is 30 billions for insurance payments left which is presumably enough to cover usual yearly insurance payments. And nearly half of that sum suddenly had to be paid for Dali fuckup.
Assumption about a half of premiums for business expenses and salaries is just an example, but the point is that premiums total is divided into two parts - the average insurance payments and other part goes to expenses, salaries and profits. Since any large corporation is purely socialistic inside, they have strict central planning about all that spendings. And sudden insurance payment of such magnitude will inevitably destroy or at least seriously harm them.
Current unusual promise of US government to cover all costs is an attempt to save Lloyd. But as far as I know, no third-party payments void the insurance case, so insurance company should pay, just because case happened. That's what in insurance contract.
Or, may be it is kind of taxpayer money laundering - tax money paid for covering disaster costs and Lloyds insurance payment of same sum goes to private pockets. Why not? - war is even less profitable, and things at current war already looks bad for the thieves. There is a dozen billion in just one bridge. I think there is a lot of bridges around to destroy. 100 bridges is a trillion of taxpayer money to steal. Along with destruction of supply chains and limiting that awful CO2 pollution from ships.
PS: Yes, I know about Ukrainian captain. And Ukrainian(UK) elites obsession with Kerch bridge. But I also know that shit and coincidences happens. I don't see any Ukrainian track in that case.
We don't have enough people, and too many of the ones that are here glow in the dark. c/Thedonald had a journalist instigate shit talk, and then write articles citing username's. Twice. There are threads celebrating being creative enough to be cited.
This community is so slow these days I started sorting the site by new, and I very rarely see c/conspiracy anymore. Even though it's the reason I'm here.
Don't be discouraged, and I don't mind if you tag me to show me something. Last night someone posted a 20 min video, and in those comments the dock workers say the coast guard kicked the ship out of dock even though it was having electrical problems because the next ship needed to dock.
I did exactly what you were just bemoaning about. I searched dummit rather than trying to find comments in a YouTube video. I did learn new things. Just not more dock workers commenting.
It's not really personal. I'm more about overall situation with unwinding all that shit. It is perfectly doable even with small amount of people, but it needs some thoughtful groupwork, not that upvoting and self-encouragement.
IDK, when searching some technical info, say NDA datasheet or some algorithm, it is something obvious to look for breadcrumbs dropped by different people and using that breadcrumbs to get closer and closer to the target.
But in the same situation with conspiracies and some weird things, everybody for some unknown reasons want comprehensive list of everything with clear conclusion.
How it is different from consumption of MSM bullshit? Supposedly conspiracy theorists have to be used to coming by breadcrumbs, like engineers and hackers. But unfortunately they are not.
When the railroaders were striking, they were in r/antiwork explaining everything. Wtf is going on with those dockworkers?! There has to be more than just the few I've read in the last few days.
This is the video. This man is also one of the best sources for the FSK bridge info, and according to the comments legacy media has interviewed him. Idk if the comments from dock workers are removed because he's got eyes on him or I'm multitasking, and missed it.
https://youtu.be/DoPRz7wk3WY?si=v3ZuMTMICYkccpPy
Now, the video he posted before this had military and people in the shipping industry in the comments explaining in detail their area of expertise. See for yourself. The problem is with so many comments. I've searched technical info about this to reply to people that didn't understand this happened in a moving body of water.
We are looking for the people that were there who are commenting. And, they are commenting. But, it's not as visable as I expected. There must not be as many as the railroaders.
AND
There's emergency legislation to keep them paid, so I'm very curious about why there's not the same visability. Now that you know my train of thought, are you curious? Because when there's more people looking things like me having shit to do doesn't mean so much.