Couldn't they just Chinook those containers onto the aircraft carrier deck and crack them open one by one? And when you've got the intel the U.S. navy has, you don't have to crack them all open, just the ones with the bad stuff
Your average 40 foot container filled full of stuff is probibly twice what a Chinook can lift. The container alone(8,598 lb(3,900 kg)) is a little over one third of its lifting ability. Maximum gross weight 68,008 lb (30,848 kg), almost 3 times a Chinook's lifting ability.
Pretty much every heavy lift helicopter on the planet maxes out in the 10-15 ton range (20-30,000 lbs). If you ever see them lifting containers they are most likely empty or filled with light bulky things like toilet paper.
Capacity: up to 5 total people[b] / 20,000 lb (9,100 kg) payload
Which still is less than the Chinook. Its large dual rotors make it by far the best option 90% of the time. A few Russian designs similar to the S-64 can lift more but they are huge monster single rotor deals that frankly are a little lacking in other areas like fuel, range, etc.
Like you I used to think helicopters were these amazing things that could lift mountains. When you really look at the numbers you suddenly realize your average F-350 truck can haul more further than most helos.
20,000 kg (44,000 lb) cargo Possibly, but at best you will have two of them rotating back and forth. They are so large they would run into each other otherwise. The ship's container capacity is 20,124 TEU. So 10k 40ft containers. Let's say 2 mi-26 rotating can move one container every 10 min = 100,000 minutes = 1,666.66 hours = 69.44 days = enough jet fuel I can't even calculate it. And that's operating 24 hours a day. If you are limited to 14 hours or so of usable daylight you're talking 4-5 months of work.
I'm really trying not to rein on you guys parade but what you're talking about is impractical. Sure if moving a few dozen containers by air is really needed it can be done, but a whole ship is just a massive task.
I will admit the one advantage is that all of this would take place at sea level so the helicopters are dealing with nice thick air and would have maximum lifting capability. See that 55k lbs at the bottom. That is for sure 95% of the containers but it would still take forever to unload 10k of them.
I commented about this a few days ago when she was good and stuck. I figured two at most flying from opposite ends could move half of the containers...maybe a few more,..in 5 or 6 months. Takes big equipment. Bigger than most deck mounted cranes can deal with.
The best heavy lift helicopter on the planet is the Mi-10R and it can lift 55k... so if we divide by 50k we get 11,723.12. So fully loaded figure like what 15,000 helicopters? Add in another 2-3k to lift all the chains you'd need. Man would that be cool to see. We should try this...:)
Don’t hate me I’m just trying to be real here. If we’re talking about 20k containers, what’s a fair amount of time to assume it would take to move each container by helicopter? 7 mins all in?
Let’s use 7 just for an example.
20,000 x 7 mins = 140,000 mins total or 2333 hours. Even if you had 12 Chinooks working round the clock, that would be like 200 hours of non stop work.
But the thing people are forgetting here is that the ship was refloated first. So it was likely moved to a part of the Suez Canal where they have Quay Cranes. Quay Cranes are built to offload those containers. If it was refloated and brought to a part of the Suez Canal where there were Quay Cranes ready and waiting they could off load it very fast. I don't know why everyone is assuming they did it by chopper.
It says right in the article the ship was FREED and then unloaded. I'd assume once they freed it they used the tugboats to pull it to port and used Quay Cranes to unload.
I couldn't believe all the commenters who seem to think they'd do it by helicopters. That'd be a huge waste of resources. I'd assume that once it was free they either used floating cranes or took it to a cargo port with Quay Cranes available. That's a way more obvious answer. The ship was freed and likely tugged to where it could be unloaded.
Based on your extensive expertise in this subject... right? Spouting your own opinions of topics you know nothing about as if they were facts... Flaming Fucktard.
Lmao, yes based on my extensive expertise doing exactly that for 5 fucking years on the same fucking carrier they are going in with. And that doesn't account for.the other 15 years I had dojng.shit.like.this. so the guy you shit on is correct and you...not so much. .
The point is that it is a big job. The ship seems to be in an area devoid of container cranes which will not help but 20,000 containers at one a minute 24 hours a day is over 13 days continuous work.
If it takes 5 minutes each or they stop working when it becomes dark you can start multiplying that up. Five minutes each is a couple of months altogether.
So are you saying it takes months to load and unload a shipping container that size? Seems pretty inefficient for an industry that relies heavily upon efficiency.
Agreed, but they don't need to know what is in all 20,000. Only the ones with high-level contraband that I would suspect they have been keeping a close eye on.
Likely the last containers on and the first off... just spitballing, but we do have good intelligence and I'm sure we have been watching...
?
sorry I don't, it's all happening so fast. monkey werx maybe. 2 separate stories - one was the aircraft carrier which entered the Suez after the ship had run aground and the other was yesterday or the day before, about 2 or 3 empty container ships plus cranes on their way to that area.
It's Egypt....several thousand years ago, many, many slaves were used to maneuver blocks into the shapes of pyramids.......until a series of events occurred to encourage the government at the time to tell the slaves to leave.......wait a minute......the anniversary of that last event is taking place this weekend....I almost passed over it!
Anyway....if you see a bunch of slaves being marched toward bitter herbs, I mean lake, expect some new metal pyramids.
Construction of the pyramids by slaves is a debatable topic to me. People have assumptions but when those assumptions are tested they've never succeeded that along with the precision of construction makes it pretty impossible that they were done with a bunch of people rolling stones on logs and other such nonsense. I dont have an answer to how they were formed I just find the standard story to sound like more false history bullshit.
As to the resurrection of our Lord.. that definitely happened. As to the slaves they for sure existed too.
I just don't buy that man power with nothing but bullshit chisels and logs formed those. ?♂️
well Graham Hancock makes a great argument that it could not have been built by extra terrestrials if that's where you're going ... his point is the mathematical encoding in the pyramids is apparent in their dimensions and orientation, but unprecise. Unprecise = terrestrial human. The work of space travelers would be characterized by precision, which is how they hypothetically could have travelled space and hit their target (earth).
I posted about a week ago on this. I would wager Napoleon and his troops built the pyramids. All through history, even through the Renaissance when there was a targeted rebirth of ancient techniques and knowledge, there was no mention of the great pyramids, no inspiration from them, no copying, no great pieces of art referencing them.
But then Napoleon goes into Egypt to ‘record’ and ‘survey’ the pyramids and unbury the Sphinx and then from that moment onwards the age of mummies begins, Howard Carter finds King Tut’s Tomb and the pyramids become one of the main inspirations of the Romantic Age that followed.
I'm talking about Greek art and sculpture being developed from Ancient Egyptian art, and yet they never used or referenced pyramids in their own art/sculpture. And then in the Gothic, Renaissance, Neo-Classical etc. there is no reference to or amazement of the Great Pyramid. As if it never existed. For instance, it was supposedly the largest structure in the world for thousands of years, yet nobody tried to refine or develop the shape, building it better and higher using less stone as they did with churches, arches, domes, towers, etc.
I'd wager the early pyramids like the Saqqara step-pyramid or the Naqada step-pyramid are the real Egyptian pyramids of antiquity. It wouldn't even surprise me if Napoleon was influenced by pyramids in the New World. I think it's safe to say pyramids in Mexico or South America were not copied from Egypt. Plus those pyramids are step-pyramids, as are generally all pyramids built elsewhere around the world. Only the great Egyptian pyramids perfected the smooth sides and the mystical 'super precise cutting techniques that could only be done by aliens,' and the 'moving thousands of stones without even having developed the wheel,' techniques etc.
They certainly heard there were pyramids in Egypt. The Greek historian Herodotus mentions them around 400 BC, but even he had never seen them and what he mentions doesn't line up with what they were supposed to be. Plus he mentions several times in his Histories that he doesn't believe what he's writing (for instance about the wars with Persia and the battle of Thermopylae) but he's writing it down because it's what people say is true. And yet he's our source for so much of that stuff, even though he says his own history cannot be real and numbers for a lot of things are exaggerated.
Also the Greeks built Alexandria and several other cities in the Nile Delta and were at any moment less than a day's journey from the Great Pyramids, yet they never visited them or recorded down their existence.
The Egyptians of 3000 BC didn't have the wheel. Pretty much everything was moved down the Nile by boat or by camels/donkeys or such. Later on better technologies came in from the Middle East and then later they had chariots and stuff and major roads.
Earlier today someone linked to the ship tracker website and it showed a US Navy battleship at the Bitter Lake. Call sign is Nike. I’m on mobile right now, otherwise I would link it, but it was posted on GAW earlier today before this tweet was even out.
Well, they are an OLD conspiracy site from the beginning of the internet. Anything and everything can be found there. Some truth, some lies, some misinformation or distortion of facts.
So, browse with caution. Verify everything. If no sources, it's garbage.
Well said. X22 is ways posted, but there is a bunch of garbage too. Yet over the years, I've found a fair amount of early truth in some videos and articles that are confirmed later on. I still check them out regularly, but you have to get familiar with the posters to see who is credible over time.
Project Camelot/Kerry Cassidy just said on telegram that the Navy Seals and some Russian seals are unloading. She said there was a nuke on board that was supposed to go off if anything went wrong and the Space Force nullified it and took over the boat and jammed it. There was some help onboard.
(https://t.me/s/projectcamelotKerry)
I don't follow here but her site looks interesting.
Maybe they aren't gonna unload all of them. They can unload some and check them out. Or have special devices to scan for humans or other things inside that may be suspect?
If Costco can check every cart leaving the store, every container needs to be approved before loading. If you need a lot of people, so be it. Add streamlining, etc. It wouldn't even be a bad job for some people. I wouldn't mind doing it.
Oooh, I looked in the comments and they are posting links to before it's news and Guido Fawkes.. I hope they don't rip her to shreds if it's not true, which given the source is a likely outcome, yikes?
OK. The only thing I really know about container ships is that they go in the water. Is it possible that they are loaded so that it is not possible to get to the ends of the containers. I can't think that they would be loaded so tightly that it wouldn't be possible to get to one somewhere in the middle. What if one near the bottom caught fire? Maybe Tesla batteries on board?
There are up to 20,000 containers on that ship. Unloading that amount would be a major task and take some time.
Good thing cargo is designed to be unloaded/loaded. What’s the point of your comment?
Do they have unloading docks in the Bitter Lake?
Unloading a full cargo ship vessel in the middle of the water would take a week just to make a solid plan - if it were even possible.
Couldn't they just Chinook those containers onto the aircraft carrier deck and crack them open one by one? And when you've got the intel the U.S. navy has, you don't have to crack them all open, just the ones with the bad stuff
Tell them there is unlimited free beer and whiskey once they get done and you'll be amazed at what happens.
I imagine they are thinking of the kids they hope to rescue.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_CH-47_Chinook#Specifications_(CH-47F)
Empty weight: 24,578 lb (11,148 kg) Max takeoff weight: 50,000 lb (22,680 kg) Capacity: 24,000 lb (10,886 kg) payload
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intermodal_container#Specifications
Your average 40 foot container filled full of stuff is probibly twice what a Chinook can lift. The container alone(8,598 lb(3,900 kg)) is a little over one third of its lifting ability. Maximum gross weight 68,008 lb (30,848 kg), almost 3 times a Chinook's lifting ability.
Pretty much every heavy lift helicopter on the planet maxes out in the 10-15 ton range (20-30,000 lbs). If you ever see them lifting containers they are most likely empty or filled with light bulky things like toilet paper.
CH53 is yhe better Helo for that kind of weight.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sikorsky_CH-53_Sea_Stallion#Specifications_(CH-53D)
Capacity: 38 troops (55 in alternate configuration) or 24 stretchers / 8,000 lb (3,600 kg) payload
Not even close. You sure you aren't thinking about this...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sikorsky_S-64_Skycrane#Specifications_(S-64E)
Capacity: up to 5 total people[b] / 20,000 lb (9,100 kg) payload
Which still is less than the Chinook. Its large dual rotors make it by far the best option 90% of the time. A few Russian designs similar to the S-64 can lift more but they are huge monster single rotor deals that frankly are a little lacking in other areas like fuel, range, etc.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mil_Mi-10#World_records
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mil_Mi-26#Specifications_(Mi-26)
Like you I used to think helicopters were these amazing things that could lift mountains. When you really look at the numbers you suddenly realize your average F-350 truck can haul more further than most helos.
My bad. Apparently the E model is a beast.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sikorsky_CH-53E_Super_Stallion#Specifications_(CH-53E)
External payload: 36,000 lb (16,329 kg)
Still that is nowhere near enough to unload thousands of containers... some of which will weigh 50,000 lbs.
90 % of the containers are well within the lift capacity of the M-26
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mil_Mi-26#Specifications_(Mi-26)
20,000 kg (44,000 lb) cargo Possibly, but at best you will have two of them rotating back and forth. They are so large they would run into each other otherwise. The ship's container capacity is 20,124 TEU. So 10k 40ft containers. Let's say 2 mi-26 rotating can move one container every 10 min = 100,000 minutes = 1,666.66 hours = 69.44 days = enough jet fuel I can't even calculate it. And that's operating 24 hours a day. If you are limited to 14 hours or so of usable daylight you're talking 4-5 months of work.
I'm really trying not to rein on you guys parade but what you're talking about is impractical. Sure if moving a few dozen containers by air is really needed it can be done, but a whole ship is just a massive task.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ever_Given#Description
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twenty-foot_equivalent_unit
I will admit the one advantage is that all of this would take place at sea level so the helicopters are dealing with nice thick air and would have maximum lifting capability. See that 55k lbs at the bottom. That is for sure 95% of the containers but it would still take forever to unload 10k of them.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mil_Mi-10#World_records
I commented about this a few days ago when she was good and stuck. I figured two at most flying from opposite ends could move half of the containers...maybe a few more,..in 5 or 6 months. Takes big equipment. Bigger than most deck mounted cranes can deal with.
How many Chinook's to lift the whole boat? or do we not want it ashore again?Happy Frog has Chinooked eyes
2, or 70
Heh. The whole boat... fully loaded?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ever_Given#Description
Displacement: 265,876 t (586,156,000 lb)
The best heavy lift helicopter on the planet is the Mi-10R and it can lift 55k... so if we divide by 50k we get 11,723.12. So fully loaded figure like what 15,000 helicopters? Add in another 2-3k to lift all the chains you'd need. Man would that be cool to see. We should try this...:)
u/#conspiracy
Plus a few extra just to make it look hard
Don’t hate me I’m just trying to be real here. If we’re talking about 20k containers, what’s a fair amount of time to assume it would take to move each container by helicopter? 7 mins all in?
Let’s use 7 just for an example.
20,000 x 7 mins = 140,000 mins total or 2333 hours. Even if you had 12 Chinooks working round the clock, that would be like 200 hours of non stop work.
But the thing people are forgetting here is that the ship was refloated first. So it was likely moved to a part of the Suez Canal where they have Quay Cranes. Quay Cranes are built to offload those containers. If it was refloated and brought to a part of the Suez Canal where there were Quay Cranes ready and waiting they could off load it very fast. I don't know why everyone is assuming they did it by chopper.
It says right in the article the ship was FREED and then unloaded. I'd assume once they freed it they used the tugboats to pull it to port and used Quay Cranes to unload.
It gonna look weird with just the US involved. Has to look like an international discovery. Optics!
Oops
Optics
That ship sailed when they stole the election and committed the coup
We have a nation to save
We'll decorate later
^ Thank you ^
I couldn't believe all the commenters who seem to think they'd do it by helicopters. That'd be a huge waste of resources. I'd assume that once it was free they either used floating cranes or took it to a cargo port with Quay Cranes available. That's a way more obvious answer. The ship was freed and likely tugged to where it could be unloaded.
We move freight onto our ship by help. It's fast, efficient and doable.
We do all this while still moving next to another ship. It's called underway replenishment and we are the only navy in the world that can do it.
If the ship is configured for it Nd they have no other unloading facility then this is a great method.
Nice. Thanks for sharing.
just unlatch the tailgate, get up to speed, and slam on the breaks ....
That assumes that this wasn't planned since before day one of initial incident.
You get the updoot.
Based on your extensive expertise in this subject... right? Spouting your own opinions of topics you know nothing about as if they were facts... Flaming Fucktard.
Lmao, yes based on my extensive expertise doing exactly that for 5 fucking years on the same fucking carrier they are going in with. And that doesn't account for.the other 15 years I had dojng.shit.like.this. so the guy you shit on is correct and you...not so much. .
The point is that it is a big job. The ship seems to be in an area devoid of container cranes which will not help but 20,000 containers at one a minute 24 hours a day is over 13 days continuous work.
If it takes 5 minutes each or they stop working when it becomes dark you can start multiplying that up. Five minutes each is a couple of months altogether.
I’ve worked at a port it takes 2-3 days to unload about 20k containers docked, out on the water with a crane might take a extra day two at most
Who's to say the containers haven't already been opened/looked at on the ever given. A handful were flagged to be inspected?
So are you saying it takes months to load and unload a shipping container that size? Seems pretty inefficient for an industry that relies heavily upon efficiency.
It dosent relay on that kind of efficiency. Its months to move most of those boxes.
I am saying if they do one a minute it will take 13 days. Is my math(s) not correct?
So what? Is it only the last container that contains whatever would be damning?
At over 1200 feet long, that ship could accommodate 4 or 5 helps at a time. Still, ibthink they know what they are looking for.
I also think they want that ship isolated right where it is and time is now on their side.
Agreed, but they don't need to know what is in all 20,000. Only the ones with high-level contraband that I would suspect they have been keeping a close eye on. Likely the last containers on and the first off... just spitballing, but we do have good intelligence and I'm sure we have been watching... ?
MAGA
An aircraft carrier and at least 3 empty container ships (plus crane ships) were registered in the vicinity.
Now this is interesting information. Do you happen to have a source for it?
sorry I don't, it's all happening so fast. monkey werx maybe. 2 separate stories - one was the aircraft carrier which entered the Suez after the ship had run aground and the other was yesterday or the day before, about 2 or 3 empty container ships plus cranes on their way to that area.
Warship 69 mil ops just entered Suez from the north, had been in Norfolk so could just be on her way somewhere. https://www.marinetraffic.com/en/ais/details/ships/shipid:3594288/mmsi:368962000/imo:0/vessel:WARSHIP_69
It's Egypt....several thousand years ago, many, many slaves were used to maneuver blocks into the shapes of pyramids.......until a series of events occurred to encourage the government at the time to tell the slaves to leave.......wait a minute......the anniversary of that last event is taking place this weekend....I almost passed over it!
Anyway....if you see a bunch of slaves being marched toward bitter herbs, I mean lake, expect some new metal pyramids.
Construction of the pyramids by slaves is a debatable topic to me. People have assumptions but when those assumptions are tested they've never succeeded that along with the precision of construction makes it pretty impossible that they were done with a bunch of people rolling stones on logs and other such nonsense. I dont have an answer to how they were formed I just find the standard story to sound like more false history bullshit.
As to the resurrection of our Lord.. that definitely happened. As to the slaves they for sure existed too.
I just don't buy that man power with nothing but bullshit chisels and logs formed those. ?♂️
God bless and happy Easter.
well Graham Hancock makes a great argument that it could not have been built by extra terrestrials if that's where you're going ... his point is the mathematical encoding in the pyramids is apparent in their dimensions and orientation, but unprecise. Unprecise = terrestrial human. The work of space travelers would be characterized by precision, which is how they hypothetically could have travelled space and hit their target (earth).
Plus the cuts are well beyond the technology we are aware of existing at the time, and the blocks may have been poured.
Don’t assume it would be precise. They may understand this assumption would be made to conceal the truth.
I posted about a week ago on this. I would wager Napoleon and his troops built the pyramids. All through history, even through the Renaissance when there was a targeted rebirth of ancient techniques and knowledge, there was no mention of the great pyramids, no inspiration from them, no copying, no great pieces of art referencing them.
But then Napoleon goes into Egypt to ‘record’ and ‘survey’ the pyramids and unbury the Sphinx and then from that moment onwards the age of mummies begins, Howard Carter finds King Tut’s Tomb and the pyramids become one of the main inspirations of the Romantic Age that followed.
I'm talking about Greek art and sculpture being developed from Ancient Egyptian art, and yet they never used or referenced pyramids in their own art/sculpture. And then in the Gothic, Renaissance, Neo-Classical etc. there is no reference to or amazement of the Great Pyramid. As if it never existed. For instance, it was supposedly the largest structure in the world for thousands of years, yet nobody tried to refine or develop the shape, building it better and higher using less stone as they did with churches, arches, domes, towers, etc.
I'd wager the early pyramids like the Saqqara step-pyramid or the Naqada step-pyramid are the real Egyptian pyramids of antiquity. It wouldn't even surprise me if Napoleon was influenced by pyramids in the New World. I think it's safe to say pyramids in Mexico or South America were not copied from Egypt. Plus those pyramids are step-pyramids, as are generally all pyramids built elsewhere around the world. Only the great Egyptian pyramids perfected the smooth sides and the mystical 'super precise cutting techniques that could only be done by aliens,' and the 'moving thousands of stones without even having developed the wheel,' techniques etc.
They certainly heard there were pyramids in Egypt. The Greek historian Herodotus mentions them around 400 BC, but even he had never seen them and what he mentions doesn't line up with what they were supposed to be. Plus he mentions several times in his Histories that he doesn't believe what he's writing (for instance about the wars with Persia and the battle of Thermopylae) but he's writing it down because it's what people say is true. And yet he's our source for so much of that stuff, even though he says his own history cannot be real and numbers for a lot of things are exaggerated.
Also the Greeks built Alexandria and several other cities in the Nile Delta and were at any moment less than a day's journey from the Great Pyramids, yet they never visited them or recorded down their existence.
The Egyptians of 3000 BC didn't have the wheel. Pretty much everything was moved down the Nile by boat or by camels/donkeys or such. Later on better technologies came in from the Middle East and then later they had chariots and stuff and major roads.
Nephilim giants. Genesis 6:4 unlocks everything.
Thank you for a polite exchange.....if these D.U.M.B.s are shown somehow that I can accept it as truth, perhaps the same constructors?
I see what you did there. Nice!
“Possible Navy Seal involvement”?
Source? Twitter LARP.
Good grief, how unserious can you be?
For what it’s worth MelQ is actually citing a verified twitter link from a republican congresswoman who is saying this.
She’s not a congresswoman.
She’s a LARPer.
Check for yourself.
Well that’s rather disappointing
MelQ is often quoted by Dave who usually goes with people he's confirmed.
Earlier today someone linked to the ship tracker website and it showed a US Navy battleship at the Bitter Lake. Call sign is Nike. I’m on mobile right now, otherwise I would link it, but it was posted on GAW earlier today before this tweet was even out.
edit: https://www.vesselfinder.com/vessels/WARSHIP-69-IMO-0-MMSI-368962000
Found the vessel finder link! Looks like it’s the Dwight Eisenhower US Navy #69, lmao. Looks to be right on the canal now.
Is melq sourcing beforeitsnews...?
Have you any experience with that site? Their article on the subject earlier was crazy...to say the least
Well, they are an OLD conspiracy site from the beginning of the internet. Anything and everything can be found there. Some truth, some lies, some misinformation or distortion of facts.
So, browse with caution. Verify everything. If no sources, it's garbage.
Well said. X22 is ways posted, but there is a bunch of garbage too. Yet over the years, I've found a fair amount of early truth in some videos and articles that are confirmed later on. I still check them out regularly, but you have to get familiar with the posters to see who is credible over time.
Yup... i thought this was the case.
Not that it's not true, but i want actual sauce from that author.
People will spread this and make us look like total fools.
Project Camelot/Kerry Cassidy just said on telegram that the Navy Seals and some Russian seals are unloading. She said there was a nuke on board that was supposed to go off if anything went wrong and the Space Force nullified it and took over the boat and jammed it. There was some help onboard. (https://t.me/s/projectcamelotKerry)
I don't follow here but her site looks interesting.
It's a matter of:
If it's the former, they could hit it quick. If it's the latter, this becomes a long process.
??
The United States Naval Institute (USNI) has an article on their site about why the Eisenhower is going through the Suez Canal today. https://news.usni.org/2021/04/02/eisenhower-strike-group-entering-the-middle-east-after-suez-canal-transit Doesn't give us the answers we want. It doesn't tell us they are involved with the Ever Given. But, it does verify that the Eisenhower is or was there today in the canal.
Maybe they aren't gonna unload all of them. They can unload some and check them out. Or have special devices to scan for humans or other things inside that may be suspect?
If Costco can check every cart leaving the store, every container needs to be approved before loading. If you need a lot of people, so be it. Add streamlining, etc. It wouldn't even be a bad job for some people. I wouldn't mind doing it.
They don’t get caught for a reason, they own it all,ports,boats,employees,the law they control what gets scanned,what gets searched,etc..
Oooh, I looked in the comments and they are posting links to before it's news and Guido Fawkes.. I hope they don't rip her to shreds if it's not true, which given the source is a likely outcome, yikes?
Don’t pick a fight with Dwight.
Could be the ship is no longer sea-worthy and the cargo will be transferred to other ships.
When those other support vessels left in a hurry yesterday I KNEW the shaft and it was GAME-ON. This is awesome news esp coming from a Representative.
“posible navy seal involvement” Hopium overdose.
OK. The only thing I really know about container ships is that they go in the water. Is it possible that they are loaded so that it is not possible to get to the ends of the containers. I can't think that they would be loaded so tightly that it wouldn't be possible to get to one somewhere in the middle. What if one near the bottom caught fire? Maybe Tesla batteries on board?
mighty IKE. Spent five awesome years on her in the 80s.