What Really Happened to the Missing Malaysian Airlines Flight 370

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Published 2023-07-17
How could a plane full of people just mysteriously vanish off the face of the Earth? Check out today's epic video that reveals the actual fate of the missing Malaysian airline's Flight 370.

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All Comments (21)
  • @JT32496
    I can’t believe this happened almost 10yrs ago! It feels like this happened just a few years ago but not nearly 10. That’s crazy
  • @guymensah
    someone who missed this flight is probably the luckiest person of all time.
  • @JonnoPlays
    This is one of those weird situations where something a decade ago still feels like it happened yesterday for so many people. Myself included. I think it's because we never got any closure and it was so heavily reported then it just went silent after a while. I've never heard most of the info in this video and I watched some documentary film about it that was created in the last few years. Just makes me wonder
  • @HappyGreg360
    Planes go up, planes go down. What planes don't do, is just vanish off the face of earth
  • @masontaylor9744
    I find it weird that a military air base didn’t scramble jets to identify an unidentified aircraft
  • @neelomach
    RMS Titanic wreckage was discovered in 1985, after 73 years when it sunk. Finding a much smaller vehicle on possibly deeper locations could take such years too.
  • @____admin
    Planes go up, planes go down, what planes don’t do, is vanish off the face of the earth. RIP ❤
  • Whether you wanna go full out and say it was “Ufo activity”, or “accidental shoot down”, SOMETHING was covered up.
  • @Brendonbosy
    Im surprised airlines havent figured out how to install tamper proof transponders. Theres literally ZERO reason to think why anyone should be shutting this system off, unless youre flying over a warzone or something
  • @stellarwind1946
    The fact that the pilot flew the same route on his home flight simulator all but confirms it was deliberate.
  • @Fabo100
    It would take too long to explain how crazy my life was and my physical/mental state at the time but I will never forget when the news broke about this and how I was feeling. It just added to my anxiety and struggles at the time. I remember thinking it was the strangest thing. So spooky
  • @christaylor4477
    Dont forget there were 22 scientists on board including 4 that recently filed patents worth billions.
  • At the 22:00 mark you say that Captain Zahari had no known interpersonal relationship strife etc. but that is demonstrably not the case. He was recently separated from his wife and living in separate houses. He was cyberstalking a pair of Asian pop influencers/IG “models” and posting super creepy comments on a bunch of their posts… He was an exemplary pilot for decades, easily among the best in Malaysia Airlines’ fleet, but the Capt. Zahari of the early 2010’s was indeed a very different person than the one his colleagues had come to know over so many years. MH370 was 100% flown off course by a trained pilot, someone who could not only turn off the transponder (simple) but also ACARS (much, much more difficult) as well as execute complex flight maneuvers and plot & adhere to a rather brilliant (in an insidious way) flight plan. This means that MH370 was pilot-controlled until the end, and there were only two pilots on board: Zahari, and the still wet behind the ears Abdul-Hamid; there were no registered or flight-trained pilots on board among the passenger manifest. That weird hour mentioned earlier, when Malaysia basically didn’t act - MH370 was in a holding pattern above the Malaysian Peninsula (not for a full hour, but for 20 some minutes, and during the hour in question) and I believe that it was during this time that Zahari was in communication with Malaysian authorities, either stating his demands - perhaps to free his recently jailed relative, who was an opposition leader of the Malaysian government - and, it’s important to point out that Malaysia Airlines is a state-owned & operated airline, so the one very much has something to do with the other. I think Zahari was a man with nothing left to lose, and when the Malaysian government didn’t give into his demands (or maybe there were no demands - maybe he was dead-set on this course all along and was just giving them a list of grievances before heading south for the southern Indian Ocean) he took the plane to one of the single most remote oceans on the planet, to where the ocean floor is so cavernous and uncharted, that he knew the plane would never be found - and that the Malaysian government would look terrible as a result. This would also explain why there’s been so much obfuscation by the Malaysian authorities in the days and weeks, and indeed years following the disappearance of MH370. The whole story is heartbreaking and yes, captivating; I’ve been obsessed with the story since the very beginning, and of all the many, many theories about the disappearance of this plane, this one here is the ONLY one that makes at least a decent amount of sense in every facet and stage, and more often than not, it makes overriding sense. Throw in the fact that he had plotted an almost entirely identical flight path on his rather fancy home flight simulator just months before - from start to finish, almost exactly the same path that MH370 took - and that’s what you call a preponderance of evidence. I hope the friends and family members of those lost on MH370 will find peace someday, hopefully alongside the answers that they so very much deserve.
  • @jorger2020
    As a former senior British captain once stated, "the aircraft’s turn to the Northwest over the Malacca Strait provided a clear view of the captain’s home island of Penang. Someone was looking at Penang, someone was taking a long, emotional look at Penang. The Captain was from Penang. In order to look at Penang, you have to turn left or right, get alongside it and then execute a long turn. If you look at the output from MH 370, there were actually 3 turns, not one. Someone was looking at Penang". I think that throws off your claim that the flight plan executed on the captain's flight simulator days earlier at his home could be "just a coincidence."
  • @jessie8896
    My parents wanted to book a flight on that plane but changed their mind. God bless those people.. ❤
  • The pilot was on a suicide mission, and he somehow managed to overcome multiple challenges: 1) His co-pilot 2) The crew 3) Made all 230 passengers "passive" (no emergency calls, no telefon calls, no text messages.....) 4) Avoid detection from multiple radars and satelites 5) Fly it somewhere in the Indian Ocean (undetected) and ditch it where it till this day is not found.... He may be a mass murderer, but it is quite a deed to be able to do all those things ALONE!
  • @YuriDyatlovYD
    I hope we find it one day. If we can study it without dismantling it, maybe the families will be at peace, knowing what happened instead of questioning it every time they think about it.
  • @delilah28100
    It took 73 years to find Titanic (accidentally!) and I can only hope that this plane will be found in my lifetime and I also hope that we will get to know what really happened.
  • @azminalibsp4800
    I first heard about it on the newspaper. At the head cover, I read how MH370 went missing and was quite shocking to realize. It gave me chills how an airplane just suddenly went missing in the middle of nowhere and no one knows where it went.