They record any type of audio and data on a flight and are designed to survive any type of flight disaster
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Originally posted by h.u.r.r.i.c.a.n.e
They record sounds in the cockpit and other information regarding how the aircraft was operating while its flying. From the data they can determine what happened (say if it was a missile, then it would probably be sudden/rapid silence.
So basically everybody will deny. Black boxes go to Russia and they come up with some kind of theory that puts blame on Ukraine. Russia gets a legit reason to further invade East-Ukraine to put an end to their stupid terrorist actions. Russian mission to get some strategic land from Ukraine accomplished.
The people in here just blaming Russia and Putin without any proof The Ukrainian government is run by legit Nazis. Stop talking about stuff you know nothing about, that's what got us into this mess in the first place
RIP to all the victims
But the US State Department confirmed that putin sent tanks, rocket launchers, weapons to Ukraine separatists recently...
How odd that the camera is pointed directly at the crash, yet we don't see a plane faling or anything during the video?
... I'm sure the person must of saw the plane and quickly grabbed his camera. It's not hard to do that. Also as you can see and hear in the video, the plane crashed further way then what we think.
You don't just show up accusing no-one of having proof, throw out the Nazi comparison, and then leave.
If you have a position and a argument for that position, make it please
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Ukraine is home to Svoboda, arguably Europe's most influential far-right movement today. (In the photo above, Svoboda activists seize a Ministry of Agriculture building during Kiev's Euromaidan protests in January.) Party leader Oleh Tyahnybok is on record complaining that his country is controlled by a "Muscovite-Jewish mafia," while his deputy derided the Ukrainian-born film star Mila Kunis as a "dirty Jewess." In Svoboda's eyes, gays are perverts and black people unfit to represent the nation at Eurovision, lest viewers come away thinking Ukraine is somewhere besides Uganda.
Svoboda began life in the mid-90s as the Social-National Party (a name deliberately redolent of the National Socialist Party, better known as Nazis), with its logo the fascist Wolfsangel. In 2004, the party gave itself an unobjectionable new name (Svoboda means "Freedom") and canned the Nazi imagery, and in the subsequent decade has seen its star swiftly rise.
Today, Svoboda holds a larger chunk of its nation's ministries (nearly a quarter, including the prized defense portfolio) than any other far-right party on the continent. Ukraine's deputy prime minister represents Svoboda (the smaller, even more extreme "Right Sector" coalition fills the deputy National Security Council chair), as does the prosecutor general and the deputy chair of parliament -- where the party is the fourth-largest. And Svoboda's fresh faces are scarcely different from the old: one of its freshmen members of parliament is the founder of the "Joseph Goebbels Political Research Centre" and has hailed the Holocaust as a "bright period" in human history.