cancel2 2022 (07-20-2018)
You're just a defeated bully, sailor. Give it up.
" First they came for the journalists...
We don't know what happened after that . "
Maria Ressa.
Stale trollshit, kid-killer.
" First they came for the journalists...
We don't know what happened after that . "
Maria Ressa.
cancel2 2022 (07-20-2018)
See #69. No- just look at it. No need to perform it.
sailor
Huh ?
" First they came for the journalists...
We don't know what happened after that . "
Maria Ressa.
'There was no going back': Hero British diver tells of last-minute decision to swim through Thai cave with youngest trapped boy in ill-fitting mask... who he would get out either 'dead or alive'
- Two British divers were part of a team that rescued the Thai football team
- Jason Mallinson and Chris Jewell told of the perilous dive to save last two boys
- The mask didn't fit the last boy properly and it was feared he would drown
- At the same time Mr Jewell lost his grip on a guide rope and was disoriented
Visibility in the tunnels was almost zero and the rescuers couldn't see the boy as they pulled him along, so Mr Mallison used his own body as a shield
In chamber 4, Mr Jewell lost his grip on the rope and was completely lost in the darkness and unable to feel out the rope with his flailing arm
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...boys-cave.html
'There was no going back': Hero British diver tells of last-minute decision to swim through Thai cave with youngest trapped boy in ill-fitting mask... who he would get out either 'dead or alive'
- Two British divers were part of a team that rescued the Thai football team
- Jason Mallinson and Chris Jewell told of the perilous dive to save last two boys
- The mask didn't fit the last boy properly and it was feared he would drown
- At the same time Mr Jewell lost his grip on a guide rope and was disoriented
'There was no going back': Hero British diver tells of last-minute decision to swim through Thai cave with youngest trapped boy in ill-fitting mask... who he would get out either 'dead or alive'
- Two British divers were part of a team that rescued the Thai football team
- Jason Mallinson and Chris Jewell told of the perilous dive to save last two boys
- The mask didn't fit the last boy properly and it was feared he would drown
- At the same time Mr Jewell lost his grip on a guide rope and was disoriented
By Nic White For Mailonline
Published: 22:26, 27 July 2018 | Updated: 08:44, 28 July 2018
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After three treacherous days, the massive rescue effort to free a boys football team from a flooded cave in Thailand was almost over.
Only one of the 12 boys remained trapped and British rescue diver Jason Mallinson was readying him to escape through the murky tunnels.
Time was running out as conditions inside the Tham Luang cave deteriorated and divers could barely see their hands in front of their face.
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Two British divers were part of a team that rescued the Thai football team and told of the perilous dive to save last two boys
However, when he tried to fit a breathing mask around the young boy's face he discovered to his horror that it was to small.
'We put it on him, really strapped down tight so his nose was flattened against his face and there was a big gap under his chin. We just couldn't get it to seal,' he told ABC 20/20.
Mr Mallinson feared the boy would drown and there was no way to contact rescuers outside the cave to bring in a new mask and no time anyway.
Australian diver and anesthesiologist Richard Harris had also already dosed the boy with ketamine to keep him calm and still during the perilous dive.
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Jason Mallinson was readying the last boy to escape through the murky tunnels when he discovered the breathing mask didn't fit properly
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Mr Jewell lost his grip on the guide rope and got so disoriented in the murky passages he started swimming the wrong way
The pair tried a different mask they hoped would seal properly and stop the rescue becoming a disaster at the last hurdle.
'We knew we didn't have any more time and we knew this was the last option,' Mr Mallinson said.
'Once you set off with that kid, it was a one-way journey. You weren't going back to where they started… It was a case of getting him out. A bit brutal but dead or alive.'
The hero diver said he was nervous guiding the boy through the tunnels because the replacement mask could easily come off sideways if it was bumped.
Video playing bottom right...
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Time was running out as conditions inside the Tham Luang cave deteriorated and divers could barely see their hands in front of their face
Visibility in the tunnels was almost zero and the rescuers couldn't see the boy as they pulled him along, so Mr Mallison used his own body as a shield.
'I developed a technique where I'd pull him in really tight with his head just down here,' he said, demonstrating.
'And, I'd extend my head over the top of his so my head hit the wall first and it so protected his head.'
Mr Mallison said he hit his head dozens of times on the cave wall but had to keep up the pace so the child didn't develop hypothermia.
Visibility in the tunnels was almost zero and the rescuers couldn't see the boy as they pulled him along, so Mr Mallison used his own body as a shield
In chamber 4, Mr Jewell lost his grip on the rope and was completely lost in the darkness and unable to feel out the rope with his flailing arm
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...boys-cave.html
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