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  1. #1
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    Default reprinting dinar means we lose

    Trust me, the only way they revalue this baby is by printing new currency and burning the crops we have in our hands. This means we gain jack.... in a box. This investment and going nowhere fast and rumors I read are brainwashing as monumental as Jim Jones. Stop drinking the koolaid and beleiving the bull.... and start looking at real numbers. Its impossible..trust me. Every person that I have shown economic data says that they would have to reissue their currency if they want to raise its value and that no economy could support the kind of circulation they have. We are talking some of the sharpest financial minds in New York City, and they arent invest advisor looking to make a buck on me. One is the CFO of a Fortune 500 company who has a PhD in World Economics Why did I buy into this crap, I dont know. He said the same. Get out while you can. I'm dumping faster than dump truck in Staten Island.

    Please reframe your language Now!!!-neno
    Last edited by neno; 19-09-2006 at 12:55 AM.

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  3. #2
    Banned lndmn_01's Avatar
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by blimpie View Post
    Trust me, the only way they revalue this baby is by printing new currency and burning the crops we have in our hands. This means we gain jackshit in a box. This investment and going nowhere fast and rumors I read are brainwashing as monumental as Jim Jones. Stop drinking the koolaid and beleiving the bullshit and start looking at real numbers. Its impossible..trust me. Every person that I have shown economic data says that they would have to reissue their currency if they want to raise its value and that no economy could support the kind of circulation they have. We are talking some of the sharpest financial minds in New York City, and they arent invest advisor looking to make a buck on me. One is the CFO of a Fortune 500 company who has a PhD in World Economics Why did I buy into this crap, I dont know. He said the same. Get out while you can. I'm dumping faster than dump truck in Staten Island.
    Good luck and good bye.

  4. #3
    Co-Admin YogiBrood's Avatar
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by blimpie View Post
    Trust me, the only way they revalue this baby is by printing new currency and burning the crops we have in our hands. This means we gain jackshit in a box. This investment and going nowhere fast and rumors I read are brainwashing as monumental as Jim Jones. Stop drinking the koolaid and beleiving the bullshit and start looking at real numbers. Its impossible..trust me. Every person that I have shown economic data says that they would have to reissue their currency if they want to raise its value and that no economy could support the kind of circulation they have. We are talking some of the sharpest financial minds in New York City, and they arent invest advisor looking to make a buck on me. One is the CFO of a Fortune 500 company who has a PhD in World Economics Why did I buy into this crap, I dont know. He said the same. Get out while you can. I'm dumping faster than dump truck in Staten Island.

    Thank you for the (un)qualified assessment as you kindly wish to send across however, many will one day turn around & say: Din Ar tell ya...???


    Good luck for being in the selected circle of advisors....



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  5. #4
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    heyyyyyyyy~! There was a Blimpie's Sub chain that just tanked and went out of business round my parts......Just thought it was funny...negative...negative! Maybe it has something to do with the name....

  6. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by tiffany View Post
    heyyyyyyyy~! There was a Blimpie's Sub chain that just tanked and went out of business round my parts......Just thought it was funny...negative...negative! Maybe it has something to do with the name....

  7. #6
    Senior Member PaulieThaGreat's Avatar
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    Default Hey blimpie...

    Blimpie I have very sad news for you my friend. I have met animals smarter then you.... My dog does more research then you and she sleeps all day. Blimpie answer me this, if the PM said there will be no reprint and no lop, then what does that leave us with? I dont even have to answer that. So blimpie do you yourself a favor and do a reprint of your internet forum life....

  8. #7
    Senior Investor Offshore-Wealth.com's Avatar
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    Default Iraqi Investments Club

    Quote Originally Posted by blimpie View Post
    Trust me, the only way they revalue this baby is by printing new currency and burning the crops we have in our hands. This means we gain jackshit in a box. This investment and going nowhere fast and rumors I read are brainwashing as monumental as Jim Jones. Stop drinking the koolaid and beleiving the bullshit and start looking at real numbers. Its impossible..trust me. Every person that I have shown economic data says that they would have to reissue their currency if they want to raise its value and that no economy could support the kind of circulation they have. We are talking some of the sharpest financial minds in New York City, and they arent invest advisor looking to make a buck on me. One is the CFO of a Fortune 500 company who has a PhD in World Economics Why did I buy into this crap, I dont know. He said the same. Get out while you can. I'm dumping faster than dump truck in Staten Island.
    Funny,

    If I had listened to every financial expert when Kuwait dinar dropped like a rock, I would be broke today and out of business. Thank God I don't listen to others anymore, I do my own research, and this is what this forum was started for, so everyone could learn from each other and contribute accordingly.

    Even if revalue does not happen soon, as everyone would like, there will not be a reprint, period. Show us the data of your COO contact on reprinting, I would love to know how anyone would come to the conclusion a reprint is going to change anything, good or bad. With current value it would not be worth reprinting, and at your supposed scenario, there is no possible way an exchange would not be allowed without total all out economic meltdown. You and your experts opinions combined are hardly worth commenting on at this point, so sell off your 25K dinar and move on.

    Good luck to all, Mike

  9. #8
    Senior Investor Offshore-Wealth.com's Avatar
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    Default Iraqi Investments Club

    Iraqi tribes in volatile Ramadi join to fight insurgency, leader says
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    (Baghdad, Iraq-AP, Sept. 18, 2006 11:00 AM) _ Tribes in one of Iraq's most volatile provinces have joined together to fight the insurgency there, and they have called on the government and the U.S.-led military coalition for weapons, a prominent tribal leader said Monday.
    Tribal leaders and clerics in Ramadi, the capital of violent Anbar province, met last week and have set up a force of about 20,000 men "ready to purge the city of these infidels," Sheik Fassal al-Guood, a prominent tribal leader from Ramadi, told The Associated Press, referring to the insurgents.
    "People are fed up with the acts of those criminals who take Islam as a cover for their crimes," he said. "The situation in the province is unbearable, the city is abandoned, most of the families have fled the city and all services are poor."
    Al-Guood said 15 of the 18 tribes in Ramadi "have sworn to fight those who are killing Sunnis and Shiites and they established an armed force of about 20,000 young men ready to purge the city from those infidels."
    He said they had asked the Iraqi government and the U.S.-led coalition "to back them with modern weapons and cars because the terrorists have weapons more modern than their rifles."
    The tribal leaders met last week and "agreed to form the Anbar Salvation Council to fight the terrorists who call themselves Mujahedeen fighting to liberate Iraq," he said.
    Tribes wield considerable influence in Iraqi society, especially among rural people for whom bonds of the clan are vital. But like all other institutions in Iraq, tribal affiliations sometimes can also be tenuous.
    It is not the first time that tribal leaders have said they will help fight insurgents, mostly foreign fighters who have infiltrated Anbar from neighboring Syria.
    Earlier this year, relations between locals and foreign fighters started to sour when the foreigners started killing Iraqis suspected of having links to the Americans or even those holding government jobs.
    The rift became an outright split with a wave of assassinations and bombings that killed scores of Anbar residents and were blamed on al-Qaida. A suicide bombing on Jan. 5 in a line of police recruits in Ramadi killed at least 58 people, including U.S. troops.
    In late May, a prominent Sunni Arab tribal leader, Sheik Osama al-Jadaan, who provided fighters to help battle al-Qaida in Anbar was assassinated in Baghdad.
    Government spokesman Ali al-Dabagh said Anbar tribes had asked the government for support in combatting terrorism in the region.
    "Anbar has been abducted by terrorist groups," al-Dabagh said. "Anbar tribes called on the government to support them because they are fighting the terrorists and they assisting Iraqi forces in the war against terrorism."
    Anbar, a vast province of mostly desert, stretches west of Baghdad to the borders of Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Syria. The area is an insurgent stronghold and Ramadi has become one of the most violent cities in Iraq.
    "Obviously the situation down in al-Anbar is very complex. And it is a multi-pronged approach that is being dealt with down there," said U.S. military spokesman Maj. Gen. William B. Caldwell, adding that the development of the Iraqi police force in the area was crucial.
    He said tribal leaders "very much want to see security brought back to that area."
    But he admitted it would take time to bring stability to the region.
    "It's not going to happen overnight. It's going to take a longer period of time, but as we watch and see what the Iraqi police and Iraqi security forces do, we're very optimistic about the future of the province," Caldwell said. "But it will not occur in the next two or three months, it will be a much longer time period."
    Defense Ministry spokesman Mohammed al-Askari said that during the past week, Iraqi security forces had met with tribal leaders and had agreed to cooperate in combating violence.
    "There are some commands took the initiative that aims to enhance the cooperation between the Iraqi army and the Iraqi tribes," he said, adding that the commander of the 7th Iraqi Army Division in Ramadi met with seven tribal leaders and agreed to work together.
    In August, hundreds of Iraq's tribal chiefs held a conference in Baghdad and signed a "pact of honor" pledging to support Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's national reconciliation plan.
    Although that pact is unlikely to bring peace to Iraq, it was an important step toward winning support in this divided nation for al-Maliki's 24-point reconciliation plan that was unveiled in June.
    Al-Maliki's Shiite-dominated unity government is struggling to control the sectarian violence and a Sunni Arab insurgency that have together claimed about 10,000 lives since it took office in May.


  10. #9
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    I can see the bashing runs deep here too. What makes you think that the prime minister is going to be in power for long? Iraq is very unstable and the government has yet to prove it can provide any form of security to the locals let alone a foreigner and the locals are getting tired of it. I see this incompetent group of politicians getting tossed out of office sooner than later. What does Iraqi koolaid taste like since your drinking it straight from the prime ministers fridge?

  11. #10
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    whats with the iraqi kool-aid???

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