What the Heck?! Thread (Closed)

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AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
Yes but I look at it like Nielsen ratings for television. They say 10 million people watched this show but they only really sampled a couple hundred households. Since I'm not a Nielsen family member what I watch don't count and has no affect.
 

no_name

Colonel
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A near-miss between two planes at Barcelona's airport in Spain has been caught on camera by an aviation enthusiast.

A Boeing 767 from Russian airline Utair is shown coming into land on the runway. As it approaches the ground, an Aerolineas Argentineas Airbus A340 taxis across its path.

The Utair jet pulls up and performs a 'go-around'. The plane lands safely shortly afterwards.

The incident, caught on camera by Miguel Angel, who posted the video to YouTube, occured on Saturday. The video has since been viewed more than 1 million times.

Angel, who has posted hundreds of plane videos to his channel, most of which have only a few hundred views, said online that seeing the incident unfold before his eyes was "one of the worst experiences I have ever had".

Captain John Holmes, flight training manager at Ansett Aviation Training said there were three possible explanations for the error.

"The instructions to the A340 possibly were misunderstood by the captain, or they might not have heard or acknowledged the instructions, or there may have been no instruction issued from the control tower," he said.

Captain Holmes said normally a "hold short" instruction would be issued to the taxiing aircraft, ordering the pilots to stop the plane and not pass on to the runway.

Captain Holmes said the pilots on board the Utair plane would have had a clear view of what was happening and would have been ready with their hands on the throttle to abort the landing and perform a go-around - a very common procedure that is regularly practiced by pilots.

Meanwhile, US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) authorities say air traffic controllers at a Houston airport narrowly averted a potential midair collision of two planes.

The incident happened on Thursday night 16 kilometres northeast of Bush Intercontinental Airport, when a Singapore Airlines 777 jumbo jet and a Delta Airlines A320 came about a half-mile (800 metres) horizontally and about 200 feet (60 metres) vertically of each other.

Federal guidelines say aircraft should be separated a half-mile (800 metres) vertically and three miles (4.8 kilometres) horizontally.

FAA's Lynn Lunsford told the Houston Chronicle that an air traffic controller noticed the danger and gave pilots instructions.

Lunsford says they have taken steps to ensure flight crews are aware of the guidelines.

In May, the FAA was investigating an incident in which an air traffic controller's mistake put two planes on a collision course.

Not exactly wtf but interesting and potentially disastrous incident, you can see the video in the link

rsvlnp.jpg
 

SteelBird

Colonel
You're one step ahead of me. Here is a video version of this incident.

[video=youtube;azw7M2pc-OA]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=azw7M2pc-OA[/video]
 

no_name

Colonel
The plane approaching for landing is probably further away than it seems, and there might be enough time for the other plane to get across the runway. But then again the pilot landing may not know whether the other plane is just crossing the runway or whether he intends to continue along it so it may be the safe thing to do in the video.
 
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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Pennsylvania man's draft notice was 102 years late
Jul. 9, 2014 - 02:59PM |


The Associated Press
FILED UNDER
News
KENNERDELL, PA. — A western Pennsylvania woman says her late father has received notice to register for the nation’s military draft, some 102 years too late.

Martha Weaver, now in her 80s, tells The (Oil City) Derrick that the Selective Service System notice arrived Saturday in Rockland Township, Venango County. That’s about 60 miles north of Pittsburgh.

Her father’s name was Fred Minnick, though the notice misspelled the last name “Minick,” and warns that failure to register is “punishable by a fine and imprisonment.”

Trouble is, her father was born June 12, 1894, which means he would have been 18 and eligible for the draft in 1912.

Weaver suspects the confusion was spawned by the incorrect birth date on the form, which lists the birth year as 1994.

Minnick had died by then, on April 20, 1992.
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Selective Service....
I just cant resist on this one.
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bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
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Charlie Hall with Wildlife & Animal Removal relocates a 5-foot column of honey bees from a home in Chattanooga, Tenn., on Wednesday, July 9, 2014. Hall used a modified vacuum to safely remove the estimated 40,000 bees and plans to relocate them to a hive. The home's owner believes the hive had been there for nearly three years but only recently became a nuisance. (AP Photo/Chattanooga Times Free Press, Dan Henry)
 

ABC78

Junior Member
THE ASAHI SHIMBUN
Disturbing trend: Japanese protesters use Nazism to attack Chinese, Koreans

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THE ASAHI SHIMBUN
May 01, 2014

Disturbing trend: Japanese protesters use Nazism to attack Chinese, Koreans

Racist chants bellowed from a loudspeaker and Hinomaru flags were waved at a rally in Tokyo attended by about 40 people following a young person dressed in military uniform.

But what set this demonstration apart from the usual protests against Koreans and Chinese were the swastika flags fluttering beside Japan’s national flag.

“We will recover the honor of Imperial Japan and Nazi Germany,” one person shouted, as the protesters marched through a busy entertainment area of the Ikebukuro district.

The rally was held on April 20, the 125th anniversary of the birth of Adolf Hitler.

Although young Japanese protesters have recently increased their use of Nazi symbols in demonstrations, the rallies are not targeted at Jews. In their minds, the demonstrators seem to believe that Hitler was justified in trying to protect the German race from a rising threat, and that Nazi-style persecution offers way to save Japan from the increasing power of China and South Korea.

Their numbers remain small, and they may simply be disgruntled youth ignorant about history. However, their praise for a man considered the most evil in the 20th century has raised fears about where their movement is heading.

“One characteristic of the latest cases is the connecting of Nazism with calls spreading through the Internet to throw out ethnic Koreans and Chinese living in Japan,” said Mitsuharu Akao, an assistant professor at Osaka University specializing in Jewish cultural studies. “As China and South Korea increase their presence in the political and economic spheres, Japan is being criticized for what it did during World War II. At the root of the latest trend is a feeling that such developments are a threat.”

A 23-year-old man who was one of the organizers of the demonstration in Ikebukuro indicated that the group was prepared to take the next step against Koreans and Chinese.

“Anti-Korean and anti-Chinese sentiment has spread through society because we raised our voices,” the man said. “We now want to push forward Nazism.”

After graduating from a senior high school in Tokyo, the man found work at a food factory and makes between 100,000 yen and 200,000 yen ($976 and $1,951) a month. He continues to live at his parents’ home.

During high school, he quit an extracurricular club because he could not get along with other members. That gave him more time to peruse Internet bulletin boards.

He found a political group and began to join its protests. He said he thought he had finally found a place he was comfortable in.

The adults he met through the group denied the Nanking Massacre ever happened and argued that Japan’s wartime actions were an attempt to liberate Asian nations that had been occupied by Western powers.

Similar arguments were found on other Internet sites.

“I realized that talk about Japan doing bad things was all false,” the man said.

He also suggested that Nazi Germany was justified in killing about 6 million Jews in the Holocaust.

“I believe that was a policy to separate the Jews who had been threatening the lives of ordinary Germans and to protect the pure blood of the German race,” he said. “There are also doubts over whether Anne Frank really wrote her entire diary.”

Ultra-rightists groups have consistently denied that Japan did anything wrong during World War II. They have also gone online to deny the Holocaust and argue that “The Diary of Anne Frank” is a fake.

In March, a man in his 30s was arrested on suspicion of damaging property by ripping up copies of “The Diary of Anne Frank” at libraries and bookstores in the Tokyo area.

During questioning by Tokyo police, the man said, “I could not forgive the fact that the diary was not written by Anne Frank herself.”

Since February 2013, about 310 copies of the classic work from the young Holocaust victim have been found damaged at 38 libraries in Tokyo.

Toward the end of last year, Nihonbungeisha Co. published a book titled “Nemurenakunaru hodo omoshiroi Hitler no shinjitsu” (Truth about Hitler that is so interesting you cannot go to sleep).

The preface explains that the book is trying to spotlight some of the good things done by Hitler and the Nazis. The word “Holocaust” is not mentioned.

The book was distributed to about 8,000 outlets of the Lawson convenience store chain. But after criticism arose that the book’s contents were not based on the truth, the publishing company decided to suspend sales about a month later.

Jewish conspiracy theories often arise during periods of social unrest or economic malaise. But large anti-Semitic movements have not formed in Japan, although sporadic incidents here have offended Jews.

Japan, in fact, still praises the actions of diplomat Chiune Sugihara, who has been called “Japan’s (Oskar) Schindler.”

Sugihara served as acting consul to Lithuania during World War II. In direct violation of orders from the Japanese Foreign Ministry, he issued transit visas to thousands of Jews fleeing Nazi persecution.

The Chiune Sugihara memorial hall stands on a hill with a panoramic view of Yaotsu, Gifu Prefecture, where he was born.

Hanit Livermore, 45, moved to Yaotsu 18 years ago with her husband who is also originally from Israel.

“I believe the young people of today accept Nazism without serious thought because they do not feel the weight of the persecution of the Jews,” she said.

Unlike in Japan, it is a crime in France and Germany to display the swastika in public.

“I felt fear when I saw T-shirts with the swastika design being sold at clothing stores in Japan,” she said.

Livermore was also shocked when her 15-year-old son, who was born in Japan, said to her, “I heard that the Jews were persecuted because they were rich.”

In Germany before World War II, various harassment tactics aimed at Jews, including a boycott of retail outlets, were carried out. These escalated into laws that, for example, banned marriage between Germans and Jews, and eventually the Holocaust.

“Understanding the dark side of history involves some pain,” Livermore said. “Even if there may only be protests now in Japan, it could possibly escalate to persecution of Chinese and Koreans if past history is not faced squarely.”
THE ASAHI SHIMBUN
 

AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
Surely one can't be that thick...maybe they were joking?

That's possible but also there are probably people that definitely believed it. I've seen animal rights people who actually believe the meat in the supermarket doesn't come from killing an animal.
 
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