The Sinking of Titanic Was Far More Preventable Than Inquiry Found

The Sinking of Titanic Was Far More Preventable Than Inquiry Found

The Sinking of Titanic Was Far More Preventable Than Inquiry Found In April 1912, the RMS Titanic sank with 1,514 souls—not victims of fate, but of calculated corporate murder. This gripping exposé tears apart the romanticized tragedy to reveal a preventable disaster orchestrated by greed and criminal negligence. From deliberately reducing lifeboats to preserve deck aesthetics to racing through ice fields for headlines, every decision prioritized profit over lives. Third-class passengers died behind locked gates while half-empty lifeboats rowed away from their screams. Through harrowing survivor testimonies and suppressed evidence, discover how White Star Line executives escaped accountability for mass murder, how official inquiries whitewashed corporate culpability, and why the same deadly patterns persist today. The Titanic wasn't a unique tragedy—it was capitalism's perfect crime, a template for how societies normalize preventable death when the poor die first and the rich control the narrative. The ship sank in 1912, but we're still drowning in her wake.