4:13 It is too tempting not to (after i was reminded yesterday with the inflatable sinking Titanic in Lincoln City) so i will write it down, after i googled and saw no conspiracy theorists ever wrote about it. (Would have been so much easier to just refer to it wouldn't it). But there is no one crazy enough or desperate enough to at least formulate this hypothesis. Of course after i saw the erected sinking Titanic at Lincoln City.
Out of curiosity, i googled and looked at second class cabins on Titanic and all of a sudden my theory seems valid. (Not the first time it crossed my mind in all these years).
Titanic happened 47 years after the end of Civil War. Titanic was scheduled to cross the ocean in 7 days. See where i'm getting at?
Don't know if the world would have been better or worse. The Brits sent their convicts in colonies, like in Australia, Canada, what now is US. But they had no idea the US would be taken over by the Imperial House of Japan.
Would the world had been better, worse? There is no way to know but i think humans deserve to know the truth. Too many lies accumulated in time lead to general confusion.
I believe at this time both Canada and Australia have a better living standard than US.
And of course, the troubling question. How many people really died when Titanic sank?

I believe at this time both Canada and Australia have a better living standard than US.
And of course, the troubling question. How many people really died when Titanic sank?


BTW Have you seen this?
11:46 I was listening in the car to ABBA from my jukebox (selected by Angela) and i remembered their first ever hit was Waterloo, with which they won and Eurovision contest and was intrigued yet again by the phrase "I feel like i win when i loose" which may have several meaning, besides bashing the French.
Don't know exactly what the h...l was in Napoleon's mind and the French that followed him but he managed to piss the whole of Europe and Russia and they allied against him in what in is known in history as the Napoleonic wars, forming the alliance of 7.
One thing that i understood was after he came out of exile after the first abdication, his only choice was to attack the Brits first before those armies could join.
However, he did not succeed as the Duke of Wellington found a very good position, behind a ridge, with his army unseen and protected by the heavy artillery while the French army of hungry loyalists slept and then rushed through mud and tried to get them before the Prussian army could arrive, which, unfortunately for Napoleon, happened and ended the battle with the run of the French army in the second deadliest battle of the whole series of wars.
Days have passed and today i remembered and tried to read as much as i could about the battle. I ended seeing a video with troops movements of the three armies involved.
But before that, i believe i found on google maps the actual ridge behind which the Duke placed his army, i think along this freeway (motorway, whatever). The ridge was an actual smooth slope with 15 meters difference between the top (what is now Butte of Lyon) and the bottom, today's freeway. (Is that a CD on Napoleon's head and that guitar was made like a sun)? 
I think the most decisive moment of the battle and one of the most dramatic moments of history was when the French attacked three times with a small group right in the middle of the British army and were of course pushed back every time but smart enough not to follow. They were waiting for the Prussians.

I think the most decisive moment of the battle and one of the most dramatic moments of history was when the French attacked three times with a small group right in the middle of the British army and were of course pushed back every time but smart enough not to follow. They were waiting for the Prussians.