Plane Crashes

An incident involving American Airlines in Savannah, Georgia, bound for Miami, Florida, occurred after a passenger claimed he was followed by demons onto the flight.

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Fact: violent incidents on planes have spiked 300% since the libs unleashed their COVID tyranny—passengers cracking under lawless skies.

Fact: Haiti’s a voodoo hotspot, with 50% of folks tied to occult rites—evil’s real, and this guy knew it. The left mocks faith, but Trump gets it: strength comes from above, not their atheist swamp. Savannah to Miami became a battlefield because we’ve let the godless run rampant—Biden’s America, folks.

This is our wake-up call. Patriots, we’re in a holy war—spiritual and literal—against a depraved regime. Flight crews deserve combat pay, not punches, and we demand justice. Follow @FinalTelegraphfor the unfiltered fight—join us, or let the demons win. As William F. Buckley Jr. said: The best defense against usurpatory government is an assertive citizenry.


A woman disrobed on a Southwest flight.



And on a positive note, on a flight from Moscow to Sochi,

 
Denver International Airport

An American Airlines plane caught fire on the tarmac after landing at Denver International Airport with engine issues Thursday evening, forcing scores of passengers to evacuate the burning aircraft, authorities said.

Twelve people were transported to area hospitals with minor injuries after evacuating the Boeing 737-800, DIA spokesperson Michael Konopasek said.

Flight 1006 had departed from Colorado Springs and was headed to Dallas Fort Worth International Airport when it was diverted to Denver after the crew reported “engine vibrations,” according to a statement from the Federal Aviation Administration.

Tracking data from Flight Aware shows the 737 left Colorado Springs at 4:52 p.m., diverted at 5:14 p.m. and landed in Denver at 5:55 p.m.

The plane landed safely and was taxiing when it experienced “an engine-related issue,” American Airlines spokesperson Brian Metham said in a statement.

The aircraft was at gate C38 when the fire started around 6 p.m., Konopasek said. Passengers were quickly evacuated with slides and the fire was extinguished, he said.

There were 172 passengers and six crew members on board, he said.


News of the fire spread quickly on social media after passengers posted videos of smoke billowing from the plane and passengers evacuating onto the wings. The FAA said passengers exited using slides.

“We thank our crew members, DEN team and first responders for their quick and decisive action with the safety of everyone on board and on the ground as the priority,” American Airlines said in a statement.

The FAA will investigate the incident.

The country has seen a recent spate of aviation disasters and close calls stoking fears about air travel, though flying remains a very safe mode of transport.

Recent on-the-ground incidents have included a plane that crashed and flipped over upon landing in Toronto and a Japan Airlines plane that clipped a parked Delta plane while it was taxiing at the Seattle airport.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Originally Published: March 13, 2025 at 7:20 PM MDT
 
Carl Lindström, dies in airplane crash over Slovenia
11 March 2025

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Ljubljana Police, crash site (into a house) • 11 March 2025


Apparently he was a very straight forward and honest man. In the media however he is/was described as "right extremist" (the usual label for anyone who is critical). He flew alone in a small plane from Zagreb (Croatia) aiming to land in Switzerland (St Moriz), but his plane crashed over Slovenia.

Lunström inherited Swedish company Wasa (bread) back in the days, and was also the founder of the file-sharing site "The Pirate Bay".

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The plane crashed into a mountain hut on Velika Planina mountain in Slovenia, 11 March 2025

Independent uk writes

Carl Lundstrom, the co-founder and early financial backer of file-sharing website The Pirate Bay, died after a small plane he was flying crashed in the Slovenian mountains.

Lundstrom, who was also a member of the far-right Alternative for Sweden party, was travelling from the Croatian capital of Zagreb to Zurich in Switzerland when his plane crashed.

The 64-year-old businessman was flying his Piper Mooney Ovation M20R, the party said, confirming reports of his death in a Facebook post on Tuesday. Lundstrom was alone in the plane, they added.

The propeller plane split into two after crashing into a wooden cabin in the Velika Planina mountain in the north of Slovenia on Monday. Bad weather prevented rescue teams from discovering the body and parts of the plane inside the cabin until Tuesday, AFP reported.

“Lundstrom, a legend and veteran of Swedish nationalism, died in a plane crash on Monday,” the far-right party wrote.

The plane likely crashed due to spatial disorientation in bad weather, local media website 24.ur reported. It added that the aircraft started spiralling downward from the altitude of 2.5km.

He was one of the early financial backers of The Pirate Bay, which was founded in 2003 to allow users to dodge copyright fees and share music and other files. His company Rix Telecom provided services and equipment to The Pirate Bay till 2005.

The Pirate Bay hit one million unique users in May 2006, the same month that Swedish police first raided its servers.

Lundstrom was one of the defendants charged with being an "accessory to breaching copyright law" when the website was dragged to court for promoting copyright infringement. He was sentenced to prison in 2012 and handed down heavy fines along with other founders.

However, following an appeal, his prison sentence was shortened to four months instead of one year.

Lundstrom also financed the Swedish Progress Party in 1991, which later merged with the Sweden Democrats. The Alternative for Sweden said Lundstrom joined the far-right party in 2018 and contested the 2021 Assembly election, which he lost.

Lundström was also the heir to a Swedish ‘crispbread’ brand known as Wasabröd, the Metro reported.

In a different light, on a more personal basis, where Magnus Stenlund had closer contact with Carl Lindström, who saw him as a mentor, can be watched in the following video (in Swedish) via SveaKanal.

 
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