Spyke
lemmy.ca

Sixty people die when Russia bombs a Ukrainian school and it passes by without much reaction. A sub with 4 people who know the risk of what they’re doing and a billionaire thrill seeker goes missing and it’s news to follow hourly.

49
lemmy.one

I get where you are coming from, but there was a lot of coverage of that event back in May.

Also, billionaires should not exist.

18
lemmy.one

As I said, "there was a lot of coverage of that event back in May". There have also been untold horrors unleashed on Ukraine since then. War is hell. Russia sucks.

7
Jurblreply
lemmy.ca

My bad, I misread your post and thought you were talking about the 19 innocent people killed by Russian missiles in April of this year. Sorry, my bad.

4

It's all good. When I was a kid in the '70s, I was living on Okinawa. The bomb people would come to my elementary every year and give a speech about what not to do if we would stumble upon unexploded ordinance. 40 years after WWII. I came to age reading about the awful, and ongoing, horrors of landmines in places like Cambodia. Reading/watching news about what's going on now in Ukraine is heartbreaking, and I can't help thinking about the long term impacts that a traumatized population will suffer. And the following years of shit exploding when a field is being plowed or whatever. It is almost too awful to even contemplate. In light of that, I agree with you, a handful of rich assholes going missing in the Atlantic is nothing.

11
nivenkosreply
lemmy.world

Because a bombing in a war isn't unexpected no matter how tragic it is.

Whereas it's rare that a group of multi-millionaires tries to visit the Titanic in a MacGyver-esque hobby submarine.

18
lemmy.world

It also tells a wider story about these "disruption-oriented" start ups where the ceos and investors are convinced that the secret to better marine/aerospace technology is less regulation.

5
nivenkosreply
lemmy.world

It had completed trips before to be fair, it's probably just some error in the sealing.

It's sad though, while I'm no fan of multi-millionaires, at least some of them here were investing in technology and space flight.

1

All I know is I would never go into a canister that is bolted shut with no way of getting out from inside. I don't give a shit how many "missions" it completed before.

3
slrpnk.net

I'm only following to make sure he's really dead. The world could use less billionaires

14
sh.itjust.works

The world isn't going to get his money. Things aren't suddenly become fair in the world because a billionaire died.

8

Do you want my billionaire? I thought it would be a novelty, to show off to my friends, like a houseplant, but it turns out, its kind of just a piece of shit.

7
kbin.social

While true, his billions aren’t going to be distributed to the poor, a dead billionaires money goes to a dead billionaires family who probably deserves the money even less but feel owed the money even more than he did.

6

Hey, don’t say that! It’s totally wrong! It should be, “The world could use fewer billionaires”.

4
Gatsbyreply
lemm.ee

Every 60 seconds in Africa, a minute passes.

11

I understand the sentiment but I think the attention is because of the novelty of it being a submarine and it being connected to the Titanic.

6

It's because it's related to the Titanic, and for whatever reason that shipwreck has a grip on western psyches. Dunno why but it just is what it is

4
lemmy.world

If only these people didn't have so much money to waste, they'd be safe. Karma?

25

As a silver lining, there is no longer any money in further studying the Titanic. The company that does tours for billionaires is also the only company continuing to research the marine life growing on the Titanic’s wreck.

3

$250K to do this; I get that yes, the money could be spent elsewhere, but we don't know how much (may be $0, may be $xxM) these people donate. Plus, air travel and generally any travel was initially pioneered by the wealthy. These billionaires doing this and space tourism are paving the way for future generations.

2
hikarulsireply
lemmy.world

Well, it is like space exploration. There are scientists, engineers and those who dream to be them. It is just part of humanity that we love going on adventures, that's the same for rich and poor. Only that some are more risk tolerated and some less

1
vlemmy.net

This man is not a scientist, engineer, or anyone with any social value whatsoever.

27
tetris11reply
lemmy.ml

He might fund people who are though (...though I wish we didn't have a system that would need that...)

5

Well anyone 'could' fund anything, but this guy has made his fortune on private jets, him dying is almost certainly a good thing for the world. Imagine how much damage.

7
ch00freply
lemmy.world

The company that provides these tours uses the money to also perform scientific research on the Titanic.

-1
lemmy.world

What 'scientific research' is there that needs to be done on the Titanic in 2023? That's an obvious smokeshow.

8

In a 2022 interview with CBC News, OceanGate CEO and Founder Stockton Rush said the goal of the repeated subaquatic expeditions is to offer researchers an opportunity to analyze changes surrounding the sunken ship, including the development of coral reefs, decay of the ship’s metal and changes to the ocean’s current.

5

What the fuck is going on with some of these comments. You can dislike the wealthy but still feel empathy for human beings (maybe) dying an horrific death.

20

I think the sentiment comes from the fact that it's next to impossible to become a billionaire without actively fucking over a bunch of people along the way. You don't just "earn" a billion, you carve it out of other people's livelihoods. With the growing wealth disparity and the ostentatious displays of asset hoarding and opulence blasting the rich seem inundated with throwing in our faces, it doesn't surprise me that some people have absolutely zero sympathy for what could arguably be described as the face of the greatest threat to society.

10
lemmy.world

As much of an experience that would be, nope. I love the ocean. Being next to it. Being in a tiny robot in the deep dark? Hell no. I hope these people saw some cool shit before they died.

8

Not for me either. The diagram of the five people in that tiny space gives me the heebie-jeebies, and I'm not claustrophobic.

6

I imagine the same thing happened here as with some airliner crashes where the pressure failsafe didn't work and they all passed out and suffocated. They probably didn't even know there was an issue before going unconscious.

5

A billionaire doing his part on stopping the existence of billionaires would be great. I fear the inheritence, though. Maybe something good will come out of it.

I can only say: I would have not wished that person harm. I would have wished them to return safely. But it does not make me sad to hear that they did not.

-1
lemmy.ml

Can you explain how this counts as news, @[email protected]?

This is massively insulting to the rest of the people onboard as well, who are not mentioned in the article from what I saw.

-29

"There's not enough content!"

"Wtf is this useless content?!"

I get it's not super interesting, but here we are talking about the worlds circumstances that caused such fkn stupid thing to happen. And how this even makes headlines is sort of primed for political discussion etc.

Its what you make it.

16

They are mentioned in both the bullet points at the top of the article and in the second paragraph.

2