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Comment by Klaster_1

8 hours ago

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Reading a note written by a sailor, in the dark, by feel, estimating his changes to be 10%, certainly felt haunting to me.

I found the story and photos entirely haunting. Those sailers had no chance.

  • The survivors possibly had a change if Russia had accepted the offer for help from the Norwegian rescue divers right away.

    • From the article

      > Analysts concluded that 23 sailors survived the initial blasts and took refuge in the small ninth compartment at the rear of the submarine.

      > Evidence suggests they remained alive for more than six hours. When oxygen grew scarce, they attempted to replace a potassium superoxide chemical oxygen cartridge, but it fell into the oily seawater pooling on the floor and exploded on contact.

      > The resulting fire killed several crew members and triggered a flash fire that consumed what remained of the oxygen, asphyxiating the last survivors.

      That does not suggest a possibility of a foreign rescue vessel making it there in time.

      1 reply →

Chomsky wrote that Western media publishes only what is "useful" for certain ends, usually political. So you think the article is useful, don't you?

Found it pretty haunting myself. You could pick a different descriptive word but haunting fits.

Being able to look at a full actual likeness of a person who is dead is incomprehensibly novel to human experience. It has never stopped giving me chills.