May 17, 2024

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Adele speaks to her fans during a concert and focuses on the Titan submarine tragedy

Adele speaks to her fans during a concert and focuses on the Titan submarine tragedy

Adele is in Las Vegas having her last shows. This week, the artist shared some intimate relationships with her fans and part of her thoughts as well as her fears.

One of the last comments he made concerned the tragedy that destroyed the submarine Titan, which was caused by excessive water pressure and in which five people died.

On June 18, OceanGate’s submarine Titan was lost in the Atlantic Ocean while on its way to visit the remains of the Titanic. After four days of searching, the United States Coast Guard reported this In the area they found the wreckage of the ship, which “corresponds to a catastrophic implosion”.

Before this week, how many people went to the bottom of the ocean to watch the Titanic?” inAmong the hundreds of attendees, some raised their hands.

She also wondered about space tourism making sure she was not interested in going down to the depths or leaving Earth. “How many people, if they could, if it cost them nothing, go into space for real? I wouldn’t be… I’m scared. I don’t even ride a roller coaster. I’m not interested in the deep sea or space, and that’s why.”

James Cameron, director of the movie “Titanic”, also expressed his feelings about this tragedy. “I was struck by the similarity between the disaster of the Titanic, whose captain warned several times about the ice in front of the ship, and yet he set off at full speed towards an ice field on a moonless night, and thus many people died,” Cameron said in an interview with The American. hv news.

“And for a very similar tragedy, where the warnings were ignored, and it happens in exactly the same place, with all the diving that’s going on around the world, I think it’s amazing.” “It’s really a bit surreal.”

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Cameron, who in 2012 became the first person to descend to the deepest point in the ocean, in a submarine of his design, confirmed that The danger of implosion under pressure was always there “First and foremost” in the minds of engineers.

“It’s the nightmare we’ve all lived” in this field of exploration, he said, referring to the security industry’s trademarks over the past decades.

“Many people in the community are very concerned about this submarine,” he added.

“Several prominent figures in the submersible engineering community even wrote letters to the company saying they experimented too much with passenger loading, and needed to get certified.”