It’s surely dark but why would they even go within a mile of an iceberg? “Look sir! Icebergs!” Where? “Ten miles north!” Great, don’t steer into them.
It makes a great story though. So much irony. The “unsinkable” ship, crashes into an iceberg on its maiden voyage. A tragedy about human hubris. A timely message about class politics. (And psst - the cabal’s biggest enemies wiped out in one go, but nobody mention that.)
It would seem logical to me that for such an ironic, perfectly scripted event to happen, ships crashing into icebergs would need to be extremely common. Instead it’s the opposite. You never hear about ships crashing into icebergs and sinking like the Titanic. There’s a big open ocean between America and Britain. Sail through that. Don’t steer into the icebergs and if you do, don’t worry, they’re twenty five miles away so you have about an hour to steer out of the way.
It’s surely dark but why would they even go within a mile of an iceberg? “Look sir! Icebergs!” Where? “Ten miles north!” Great, don’t steer into them.
It makes a great story though. So much irony. The “unsinkable” ship, crashes into an iceberg on its maiden voyage. A tragedy about human hubris. A timely message about class politics. (And psst - the cabal’s biggest enemies wiped out in one go, but nobody mention that.)
It would seem logical to me that for such an ironic, perfectly scripted event to happen, ships crashing into icebergs would need to be extremely common. Instead it’s the opposite. You never hear about ships crashing into icebergs and sinking like the Titanic. There’s a big open ocean between America and Britain. Sail through that. Don’t steer into the icebergs and if you do, don’t worry, they’re twenty five miles away so you have about an hour to steer out of the way.