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Author Topic: Alvarez: Spies In The Vatican  (Read 1658 times)

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Offline roscoe

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Alvarez: Spies In The Vatican
« on: December 11, 2012, 08:47:02 PM »
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  • I do not know how the author expects his readers to swallow that the battleship Maine blew up 'accidentally' in Havana Harbor. His rendition of the entire series of events is somewhat suspect.  :reporter:

    There Is No Such Thing As 'Sede Vacantism'...
    nor is there such thing as a 'Feeneyite' or 'Feeneyism'


    Offline roscoe

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    Alvarez: Spies In The Vatican
    « Reply #1 on: December 11, 2012, 09:13:13 PM »
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  • There is no explanation as to just how the 'accident' happened.
    There Is No Such Thing As 'Sede Vacantism'...
    nor is there such thing as a 'Feeneyite' or 'Feeneyism'


    Offline Incredulous

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    Alvarez: Spies In The Vatican
    « Reply #2 on: December 11, 2012, 10:15:09 PM »
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  • I thought this link was about Vatican spies?


    Anyway, how do you think it was blown-up ?





    The total devastation of the ship looked like a boiler explosion to me.



    The Navy did a 2nd investigation in 1911.




    In 1911 the Navy Department ordered a second board of inquiry after Congress voted funds for the removal of the wreck of Maine from Havana Harbor. U.S. Army engineers built a cofferdam around the sunken battleship, thus exposing it, and giving naval investigators an opportunity to examine and photograph the wreckage in detail. Finding the bottom hull plates in the area of the reserve six-inch magazine bent inward and back, the 1911 board concluded that a mine had detonated under the magazine, causing the explosion that destroyed the ship.

    Technical experts at the time of both investigations disagreed with the findings, believing that spontaneous combustion of coal in the bunker adjacent to the reserve six-inch magazine was the most likely cause of the explosion on board the ship. In 1976, Admiral Hyman G. Rickover published his book, How the Battleship Maine Was Destroyed. The admiral became interested in the disaster and wondered if the application of modern scientific knowledge could determine the cause. He called on two experts on explosions and their effects on ship hulls. Using docuмentation gathered from the two official inquiries, as well as information on the construction and ammunition of Maine, the experts concluded that the damage caused to the ship was inconsistent with the external explosion of a mine. The most likely cause, they speculated, was spontaneous combustion of coal in the bunker next to the magazine.
    Some historians have disputed the findings in Rickover's book, maintaining that failure to detect spontaneous combustion in the coal bunker was highly unlikely. Yet evidence of a mine remains thin and such theories are based primarily on conjecture. Despite the best efforts of experts and historians in investigating this complex and technical subject, a definitive explanation for the destruction of Maine remains elusive.

    Eternall rest grant unto the crew of the USS maine Oh Lord,
    and may Your perpetual light shine upon them.







    "Some preachers will keep silence about the truth, and others will trample it underfoot and deny it. Sanctity of life will be held in derision even by those who outwardly profess it, for in those days Our Lord Jesus Christ will send them not a true Pastor but a destroyer."  St. Francis of Assisi

    Offline RomanCatholic1953

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    Alvarez: Spies In The Vatican
    « Reply #3 on: December 11, 2012, 10:28:12 PM »
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  • The theory is that the explosion came from the ammunition bunker. Coal fired
    ships are dangerous because of the fumes. The USS Maine was a
    coal fired ship. The hot coal fumes somehow got into the ammunition
    bunker perhaps by an unsecured hatch, and that what caused the explosion. Coal fumes and live ammunition is a fatal mix.