View Full Version : 2 UNANSWERED Questions of the Germanwings Flight Crash
sigma6
31st March 2015, 06:46
What! no germanwings conspiracy post! o.O!
DL0urxc31K4
wnlight
31st March 2015, 14:00
It is clear to me that there was no person on board the Germanwings flight that TPTB cared about. So they let the plane continue on its fatal trajectory without any interference.
Cardillac
31st March 2015, 14:31
if one has read Kerry Cassidy's blog on this subject (she quotes Jim Stone) there was a woman on board who was an important Booze Allen financial group asset (or maybe whistleblower); am not sure whether this would be the reason for the suspicious crashing of this plane;
all commercial airliners are flown remotely; their flight routes are pre-programmed on a computer; keeping that in mind what I find so suspicious is the plane managed to crash in the most inaccessible area of its flight route; coincidence?- I've never believed in the concept of coincidence-
besides that and the relentless repeating in German MSM the "suicidal" co-pilot (give us a break) locked the pilot out of the cockpit (the more often and louder a concept is trumpeted in MSM the bigger the lie is), it is impossible for a co-pilot to lock the pilot out of the cockpit due to the ca. 7 digit code known by the pilots/flight attendants to gain access to the cockpit-
the "officious" story of this airplane's demise stinks to high heaven-
Larry in Germany
Roisin
31st March 2015, 15:45
He lived part of the time at his parent's home. I'm very suspicious of the information about what's in the news about this co-pilot wrt to his mental and physical health status as any parent would do everything humanly possible to prevent their own son from piloting any commercial airliners if they knew even a fraction as what's in the news about him now. They would most definitely have contacted that airline to inform them that their son was not in any shape to fly those planes..... not only to save their son's life either....
Obviously he was close to his family or else he would not have lived with them in the first place.
Things are just not adding up. Too many gaping holes in this narrative they want us to believe about that co-pilot and the crash.
Elainie
31st March 2015, 17:18
Two pilots with the initials of AL and PS crash in the alps!
aranuk
31st March 2015, 18:17
Barcelona to Dusseldorf direct route is more or less due North slightly going to East. Why was the plane flying over the Alps? Check out Google maps. What a strange route to take.
Stan
cuitlahuac
31st March 2015, 23:16
I think the plane was hacked. Brought down. A poison gas canister attached to the air system and triggered by the "seat belts" signal when the plane reached altitude. And exactly 30 minutes later, the engines were shut down. Either by programming or by remote control. And the computer flies the plane perfectly, like a glider in an 8 minute descent, right into an Alp.
I think looking at the passenger list could be very informative. This looks like a hit. A major hit, at the level of nation-states or the largest criminal cartels. Or a worldwide group of fanatics. So, who was on this flight?
Don't expect an honest answer. There are no honest governments."
http://82.221.129.208/a320crash.html
http://82.221.129.208/frenchowl.jpg
ulli
31st March 2015, 23:45
Barcelona to Dusseldorf direct route is more or less due North slightly going to East. Why was the plane flying over the Alps? Check out Google maps. What a strange route to take.
Stan
I flew that exact route Barcelona- Duesseldorf eight years ago,
and got the most amazing view of the highest Alpine peaks.
It's a standard route.
aranuk
2nd April 2015, 02:04
Barcelona to Dusseldorf direct route is more or less due North slightly going to East. Why was the plane flying over the Alps? Check out Google maps. What a strange route to take.
Stan
I flew that exact route Barcelona- Duesseldorf eight years ago,
and got the most amazing view of the highest Alpine peaks.
It's a standard route.
Can you explain why it is a standard route Ulli? On the map it looks to me like an unnecessary detour. I can understand that a longer flight say from London to New York is not a straight line between the two cities and that it is curved as that is the shortest route because of the curved Earth. But that Barcelona to Dussseldorf curve seems to be much greater in relation to the distance between the two cities. That is what I was inferring.I also understand that some airlines are not allowed to fly over certain neighbouring countries es like Edinburghfor example: Turkish airlines flying from northern places like Edinburgh or Amsterdam to Istanbul don't fly over Greece.
Stan
Matisse
2nd April 2015, 03:11
Barcelona to Dusseldorf direct route is more or less due North slightly going to East. Why was the plane flying over the Alps? Check out Google maps. What a strange route to take.
Stan
I flew that exact route Barcelona- Duesseldorf eight years ago,
and got the most amazing view of the highest Alpine peaks.
It's a standard route.
Can you explain why it is a standard route Ulli? On the map it looks to me like an unnecessary detour. I can understand that a longer flight say from London to New York is not a straight line between the two cities and that it is curved as that is the shortest route because of the curved Earth. But that Barcelona to Dussseldorf curve seems to be much greater in relation to the distance between the two cities. That is what I was inferring.I also understand that some airlines are not allowed to fly over certain neighbouring countries es like Edinburghfor example: Turkish airlines flying from northern places like Edinburgh or Amsterdam to Istanbul don't fly over Greece.
Stan
I think it is a fairly direct route... remember maps are flat but the world is round.... by car for sure i would drive just west of the alpes...but by plane it would seem more direct just to fly over them...
Barcelona is at a latitude of 2.1 and Dusseldorf is at 6.7...Grenoble is at 5.7... i know it doesn,t seem like it but both the alps and Dusseldorf are east of Barcelona...just like Portugal is further west than Great Britain.
Powered by vBulletin™ Version 4.1.1 Copyright © 2026 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.