April 10, 2024 / Joseph P. Farrell
Ok, when K.M. sent along this story, I knew I'd have to share it and blog about it, because this is one that I'm about 50/50 with, for the simple reason that "two is a coincidence, three is a pattern," but also because the story is about one of my favorite bridges in the world, the elegant Verrazano Narrows suspension bridge in New York City, the massive structure connecting the Brooklyn and Staten Island boroughs.
The story concerns a French shipping company's ship that lost power just before the Verrazano Bridge, and required the assistance of three additional tug boats to stop the ship. Here's the story:
Coming as it does mere weeks - days really - after the disastrous collision of the Dali with the Francis Scott Key Bridge and the latter's dramatic collapse, this incident does leave one wondering. The Dali clearly was losing power repeatedly, and the ship's systems appeared not to be functioning properly. And then, the last minute turn out of the main channel and the ship headed directly for the south pylon, and we know the rest.
But not to worry here! The Wall Street Journal is on duty and reassures us a similar incident here would be impossible:
While the Verrazzano shares some characteristics with the Key Bridge, there are also important differences,” an opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal recently read, adding:
“First, its massive vertical supports are positioned much closer to land than the Key Bridge’s—1,000 feet away from the harbor’s navigation channel—making them considerably less likely to be hit by an errant vessel. The towers also are surrounded by rock islands, which would force any ship heading toward the supports to run aground before striking the tower. Additional safety projects have further hardened protections, even adding an air gap sensor system that detects vertical clearances between the bridge and large vessels passing underneath.”
And then Zero Hedge adds it's own high octane speculation in the form of a recommendation:
The collapse of the Baltimore bridge has sparked discussions in corporate media about America’s vulnerable infrastructure. Within government, high-level officials are likely concerned about terrorists crippling the nation through a series of infrastructure attacks. Maybe it’s time the US government vet all foreign crews of commercial vessels entering America’s waters…
Perhaps it is time for such vetting, but perhaps it is also time to start taking seriously the possibility of technological hijacking of such systems, even of the types of redundant systems one finds on ships.
And while we're at it, I don't know about you, but I for one am less than reassured by The Wall Street Journal's glib dismissal of any idea that this incident might have been a repeat of the Baltimore disaster, for a large cargo ship running aground on the islands surrounding the the Verrazzano-Narrows Suspension towers might do so in such a way to form an impediment or for that matter a complete blockage of the main channel, which could have disrupted normal shipping traffic for several days, and possibly weeks, until the ship could be freed.
So one can colour me moderately skeptical that this incident is not unrelated to the Baltimore disaster: it's a bit too coincidental and too close in time to the Baltimore bridge collapse to be ignored, but on the other hand, two is still just a coincidence...
... unless, of course, one wants to locate the two incidents in a wider, and apparently "disconnected" context like the USS Donald Cook, Fitzgerald, and John McCain incidents. Perhaps even the Havana Syndrome incidents. Then things become much more interesting.
you probably already realize this, but others , I am sure, do not. the Verrazano Narrows bridge is the longest suspension bridge in the western hemisphere. yet another iconic engineering marvel I am sure they would love to bring down. that being said, what would happen if a couple of well positioned ships were sunk in the middle of the hudson river? it could be anywhere between the nyc harbour and the tappenzee bridge. wouldn't that be something...
The Tappan Zee Bridge was renamed to The Governor Mario M Cuomo Bridge in 2017 - lest we forget the former governor who spawned such notable offspring as former NY Governor Andrew (NY nursing home C19 infamy) and FNM propagandist Chris (quarantine rules for thee, but not for me).
Whoever is trying to (and succeeding in one recent case) take down these bridges is trying to create chaos and financial devastation that will reverberate well beyond the region. Are they trying to implement further tracking and control of people's movements as well? Likely so. I'd be damn nervous driving through one of the many tunnels in various major cities (NYC, SF, MD, Boston, etc) these days. And you're right that jamming up river routes would just be another tactic in the same category. So glad we have Petey Buttplug at the helm steering us through with the response to all these transportation attacks.
I think someone's mee-maw died in a nursing home in NYC. I think the mourning grandchild happens to have a 'special set of skills', sorry to sound cliche. I think they decided to take revenge on the whole of New York. I think both black hats and white hats are motived to locate this individual, but for much different reasons. And I think she (or he) needs help and understanding. Not prison or recruitment. But my opinion is my own and YMMV.
🐸 kek
if you drive on the many roadways in ny that would have signs declaring the bridge as the mario cuomo memorial bridge, sure . but when you are in nj, the signs still call it the tappenzee. just like the triboro is supposed to be the rfk, or the queensboro is supposed to be the ed koch, even the brooklyn-battery tunnel being the hugh carey. most people still use their original names for it. complying with cuomo on his renaming forhis daddy is not something I wish to do. thanks though.
I hear you - and I only know this because I happened to go over TZB fairly recently, hadn't been in years, and was thinking WTAF?? Couldn't they have picked a decent person to name it after if they felt compelled to give it a new name?
well, andrew was the man in power at the time and was still in good graces of the commie apparatchik of nys. hilarious seeing the signs in nj the way nys was going all in to tell people it's new name. while we still have a free country, I will not comply with their name changes.
They would need some BIG ships to sink, but yes, if they did it would be a total disaster.
would depend on where, right?