
Len Saputo, MD is a graduate of Duke University Medical School and board certified in Internal Medicine. He was in private practice in affiliation with John Muir Medical Center in the San Francisco Bay Area for more than 30 years. His approach to healing has evolved from mainstream medicine into “Health Medicine”—an integrative, holistic, person-centered, and preventive style of practice.
The Dali-Lema strategic stunt,
1) the vessel approached the bridge perfectly on the outbound lane
(between the light house island and the south pylon. The inbound lane is
between the light house island and the north pylon).
2) right before passing under the bridge, the path veered right and
headed straight for the south pylon, never entering the inbound lane,
see attached screenshot.
3) In the attached video, which is sped up, you can clearly see the
following: a) all is copacetic, b) there is the first ELECTRICAL power
outage (or someone just turned the lights off), c) when power comes back
on (or someone flips the light switch back on) the engine immediately
goes full throttle as indicated by the massive black plume emerging form
the stack and at the same time the 1,000ft long Dali-Lema initiates a
sharp right turn. To make such a sharp turn it needs full power to have
the rudder create the maximum lateral momentum to facilitate the rapid
turn. d) the Dilly-Dali heads straight for the pylon as nicely seen from
the perfect angle of the camera, e) black smoke still emerging from the
stacks, indicating full throttle and excessive fuel injection, hence the
incomplete combustion, f) right before the collision with the pylon the
Willy-Nelli veers slightly left, assuring a slightly off-center
collision for maximum energy transfer to the pylon foundation.
Conclusion: this was a precision-collision, likely simulated on a
computer beforehand to get everything right.
Part 1