Home » Concordia: Oh Captain, my captain

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Concordia: Oh Captain, my captain — 14 Comments

  1. “There are 3 things I like about being on an Italian cruise ship. First, their cuisine is unsurpassed. Second, their service is superb. And then, in time of emergency, there is none of this nonsense about women and children first.”
    From the book: The wit & wisdom of Winston Churchill

  2. The captain of the Concordia is like President Obama. He wrecked our ship of state and sailed it up on the rocks. Then he abandoned ship and went on vacation in Hawaii while all the passengers/citizens had to suffer without anyone in charge. And now he is hiding behind lies.

  3. I suspect Churchill knew his stuff. Anybody remember the Andrea Doria? Same disregard of lifeboat rules on the part of the crew.

  4. Pingback:Fausta's Blog » Blog Archive » Vada a bordo, cazzo! #vadaabordocazzo

  5. I tripped and I ended up in one of the boats. That’s how I found myself there.”

    He said he got stuck in the lifeboat for an hour before it was lowered into the water off the coast of Giglio island.

    AKA the “Bitch set me up” defense.

  6. Sorry, Capitano, that excuse won’t wash. Even if you did somehow get “stuck” in the boat, the whole problem is that you weren’t supposed to be in a boat in the first place! You’re the captain of the ship and you’re supposed to be in the last boat off.

  7. Another columnist notes with alarm that the Coast Guard guy who was recorded trying to get il capitano to do his duty is now a hero.
    That’s sad, says the columnist, as the coastie was doing his duty without significant risk.
    It means that this coastie is the best Italy has, which is the unfortunate point the columnist makes.

  8. Indeed. The coast guardsman has never captained a sinking ship so who is he the judge.

    Seems I heard something like this before. Can’t recall where…..

  9. The Coast Guard captain was right. The coasties train for rescue and assistance, but that also depends on emergency protocol being followed onboard the founding ship. Imagine, if you will, firemen showing up at a fire in a hospital and finding that the staff hasn’t followed protocol but has left the patients in the burning building while saving themselves.

    I have a great deal of respect for the Canadian and US Coast Guard. The saddest occasions are when they die rescuing someone who put himself in harms way, e.g. boating drunk during galeforce winds or going snowmobiling on the ice when there’s open water.

  10. Don’t know much about ships but I do know something about large steam boilers and I can tell you for sure there was no talk of

    lighting extra boilers


    Boilers like that need up to a week to “warm up” before you can use them. So if J. Bruce wanted extra boilers for the last leg of his journey he would have had to light them about the time the ship left Southampton.

    On another Bruce Ismay note: when life gives you lemons tell your descendents to make lemonade.

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