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Tramp Steamers

Woodtroll

One Too Many
Messages
1,255
Location
Mtns. of SW Virginia
I don't think so. For a while the morning news would report on the criminals being released from prison by Governor Nuisance for one weak reason or another, and a percentage of those criminals seemingly couldn't wait to commit another crime so they could get arrested and go back to prison. So now they don't mention anything about the releases, just the arrests. :rolleyes: No, the people running this state are about as sharp as a crate of bowling balls.

And then, I could be wrong about the "maybe they're beginning to learn" part. ;) And California is hardly the only state with a revolving door criminal policy, to be fair.
 

Tiki Tom

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,901
Location
Oahu, North Polynesia
Piracy update, by the numbers.
On average, two attacks per week.
Cruise ship in Philippines tells passengers to turn off lights and stay off decks as they pass through pirate infested waters. In a separate instance, elsewhere, passengers threw chairs at pirates as they tried to board.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/cruises/piracy-threat-cruise-ships/

Wild stuff, indeed.
 

Tiki Tom

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,901
Location
Oahu, North Polynesia
Another great story about the Russian ghost fleet.

https://maritime-executive.com/arti...-was-carrying-nuclear-submarine-reactor-parts

it appears that, last year, a mysterious Russian freighter, the “Ursa Major” —-long suspected of being an arms smuggler—-, sank in the straights of Gibraltar. Now the Spanish press is reporting that she had been carrying nuclear reactor parts to North Korea and the sinking was most likely not an accident.

Tramp freighters with illicit cargoes sneaking between obscure ports. Nefarious covert operations and spies. We are living in a second golden age of smuggling and pirates. But these captains are not dashing romantic rogues, they are simply maritime criminals.
 
Messages
12,482
Location
Orange County, California
When I was a young man, I had no idea that this was even an option.


When I was growing up my Dad worked for Pan Pacific Fisheries Cannery on Terminal Island, California. As I grew older and realized I was going to have to find a job to support myself after high school, I asked him about the cannery, the boats they used, other facilities on Terminal Island, and so on, to see what careers might be available to me. He was a little evasive with his answers, and eventually told me that trying to find a job there wouldn't be a good idea. He said he didn't think the cannery or any of the other local businesses would be there much longer, and, sure enough, today that whole area is owned and supervised by the Port of Los Angeles.

What he didn't tell me was that, at the time I was asking about careers there in the late-1970s, Pan Pacific Fisheries, as an entity, was owned and operated by the west coast faction of "The Mob". They were still in charge of that area when Dad retired in the mid-1980s, but were soon run out while the local government could "legally" confiscate those properties and such to create the modern version of the Port of Los Angeles. Looking back, I'm glad he steered me towards more honest careers, but I'm quite sure I'd have made more money working in a career that was less legal.
 

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