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  3. THE 'COSTA CONCORDIA' HAS BEEN RAISED

THE 'COSTA CONCORDIA' HAS BEEN RAISED

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    Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — A Night to Remember


    snsurone — 12 years ago(September 18, 2013 10:25 AM)

    In an old thread I started, I asked if the Costa Concordia would be uprighted.
    Well, it was this week.
    I wonder what will happen to it now.
    IMHO, it should be made into a maritime museum in memory of those who perished that terrible day.

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      TheGuyWithTheFeet — 12 years ago(September 23, 2013 07:59 AM)

      Why? It's a rusty piece of junk. No one can go inside it. It would just be floating off the coast for people to look at. Don't forget maintenance so that the ugly thing doesn't sink again.
      Why would you save it? Put up a stone monument. Don't save a 1000ft rusty piece of junk.
      "Perished"? "That terrible day"? What is this? An old seaman's tale? First, perished is an old-fashioned word that is apparently linked to every shipwreck story for some unknown reason. Second, it happened at night.
      It's going to float there for a few months as crews clean out furniture and debris. They're going to search for remains but it's doubtful they'll find any. After that, they're going to tow it somewhere so that it can be mercifully ripped apart and put out of its (and our) misery. It was hideous before it sank and even more hideous now.

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        BoultersCanary — 12 years ago(November 05, 2013 02:03 PM)

        You think the Concordia was foul? Have a look at this piece of maritime drek
        http://www.flickr.com/photos/15471937@N06/6105997246/in/set-7215762615 9885344
        Apparently there is a whole
        fleet
        of the bloody things out there somewhere [shudder!]
        The church may shout but Darwin roars

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          baran_erik — 10 years ago(February 28, 2016 12:50 AM)

          Why you being such a dlck? Perished is hardly an old-fashioned word. Maybe for today's generation that uses Twitterspeak instead of proper English. Thirty two people died and a "day" consists of the daylight hours as well as the night time hours, DB.

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            TheGuyWithTheFeet — 10 years ago(February 28, 2016 03:56 AM)

            Ay, matey, because when yon poster posted that blarney tale that fateful day, it sounded stupid.

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              MadTom — 12 years ago(November 09, 2013 03:38 PM)

              You want an example of what a rust-bucket eyesore the
              Costa Concordia
              would make if it were salvaged and put on display? (And the
              Titanic
              as well if they ever developed the technology to bring it back to the surface?)
              https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d8/SS-United_St ates.JPG/1280px-SS-United_States.JPG
              This is the
              SS United States
              , the fastest ocean liner ever built, launched in the 1950s and larger than either the
              Titanic
              or an
              Iowa
              -class battleship (one of which, the
              USS New Jersey
              , is nicely preserved within sight of it across the Delaware river). The
              SS United States
              has been sitting at a pier on the Philadelphia waterfront since 1996 and sat at a dock in Norfolk, Virginia for 27 years prior to that. IMHO, it's the worst eyesore anywhere on the Delaware river; cross the Walt Whitman Bridge between South Philly and South Jersey where you'll have a view of all of Center City Philly, and it's easily to spot with its faded paint and rust. Actually go into Philly and drive along the waterfront and it looks even worse!
              If a once-glorious ocean liner like that can sit abandoned for 44 years, why would anyone want to invest in preserving a run-of-the-mill cruise ship which was run into a reef killing 32 out of 4300 passengers and crew (as opposed to a much worse shipwreck like the
              Titanic
              where 1500 died out of 2200 passengers and crew)?
              (The
              USS New Jersey
              is the most decorated warship in US Navy history and is kept well-preserved for that reason.)

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                BoultersCanary — 12 years ago(November 10, 2013 05:23 PM)

                I don't agree - the United States is pretty, even in decay (though I still think her funnels are too big).
                It is probably too late, but I do wish that somebody would refit her and use her as a cruise ship. It can be done. It
                has
                been done - here is an ex-transatlantic liner converted to a cruise ship: -
                http://www.iglucruise.com/images/_i829094.jpg
                The church may shout but Darwin roars

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                  MadTom — 12 years ago(November 26, 2013 01:35 PM)

                  Oh, well! One man's trash is another man's treasure.
                  Do you actually live near that part of the Philly waterfront along Delaware Avenue? Luckily for me, I live in Turnersville, NJ and very rarely go into that part of the city, like maybe once every few years to shop at the Ikea directly across the street from that dock, so I don't feel that strongly about it either way as I can choose to look elsewhere whenever I cross the Walt Whitman.

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                    BoultersCanary — 12 years ago(November 27, 2013 10:20 AM)

                    No, I don't live in the USA at all - I've just seen pictures and have a bit of an ocean liners obsession. I'd hate to see the United States scrapped, but I guess its pretty inevitable now.
                    The church may shout but Darwin roars

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