Since early Tuesday morning, a search operation has been initiated to locate six construction workers who were on the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore when a large cargo vessel collided with one of its columns. The bridge collapsed into the Patapsco River, blocking a crucial route for East Coast shipping.
James Wallace, the Baltimore City Fire Department chief, stated during a press briefing that around 1:30 a.m., a vessel departing from the Port of Baltimore struck the Key Bridge, leading to its rapid collapse. Video footage captures the cargo ship colliding with one of the bridge’s columns, resulting in the bridge breaking apart and falling into the water and onto the ship, followed by a burst of flames and smoke rising into the night sky.
The moment Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore collapsed after a cargo ship struck it in the early hours of this morning in the US.
The third video shows the aftermath of the incident on the 1.6 mile long bridge. pic.twitter.com/0jkUDzRftX
— Suppressed Voice. (@SuppressedNws) March 26, 2024
Some have begun speculating that the collision was the result of a cyber attack. In the video, the cargo ship has fluctuating electrical problems right before it hits the bridge.
This ship was cyber-attacked.
Lights go off and it deliberately steers towards the bridge supports.
Foreign agents of the USA attack digital infrastructures.
Nothing is safe.
Black Swan event imminent. pic.twitter.com/14SBqK8tJA
— Andrew Tate (@Cobratate) March 26, 2024
We want to ask you, the reader: do you believe the Baltimore bridge collapse was a cyber attack? Answer in our poll below and share your theories as to what caused this catastrophe, whether it was an intentional attack, purely accidental control issues, or human piloting error.
If you cannot see the poll, click here.
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