Wednesday, May 23, 2018

MH370

Hi Honey!  How's it going for you today?  I hope everything is fine with you, and that you are feeling great.  I love you with all my heart.  Sorry I'm running late today, I had to do some studying for today's blog.

Hi Natty Honey!  Wow, that is a lovely outfit you're wearing.  Is it pink?  Fuchsia?  Oh, pomegranate.  And the car is pomegranate, too.  SUV, right?  I'm color blind, Honey.  But I try my best.  You are beautiful, and I love you.

There are fewer things more entertaining than the mysterious disappearance of a jetliner.  MH370 took off in the middle of the night to China, took a sharp almost U turn, flew right over the Malaysia-Thailand border to Penang, then took another turn towards the Andaman Sea where it left radar.  It didn't show up on India or Indonesia radar, and satellite data indicates it turned southward at a steady pace where it disappeared over the Indian Ocean.  The only debris found, a flaperon, was at Mauritius (off the coast of Madagascar, Africa).
Maybe it flew below radar to the Indian Ocean, for the pilot certainly had the skill and experience to do so.  The satellite data is vague, because it indicates the jet never slowed down before it disappeared (meaning that it never crashed).  My guess is that the jet landed gently on the water in the Andaman Sea (no debris), where it sunk to the bottom of a trench, closer to Thailand instead of India.  Whatever, this sure looks like the case of MH370 is a murder-suicide.

To make sense of MH370 to human justice is near impossible, because there is no evidence that anything happened to anybody aside from radar.  No bodies, no death.  They could have been cryogenically preserved by mermaids, which is equally as valid as murder-suicide, since there are no bodies.  But a jetliner, with people inside, are missing.  So to make a case is to create an angle, and investigate from there.

There are 2 seats in the cockpit, with little standing room.  Perhaps the co-pilot left the cockpit, and the pilot took the chance to immobilize everybody on the jet so he could act without interference.  Considering how precise the flight path is, I feel that he must have had at least the co-pilot's assistance.  What is the motive?  These people had families, they were not unsuccessful in life, why would they commit murder of innocent people?

The most logical perspective is that they were under orders to do what they did.