quote:Originally posted by Munchkin Man: Have you ever given any thought to trying estrogen therapy? Munchkin Man
MM.. you might not last long here if you make personal attacks.. dont bother if others make the same personal attacks.. looks like they can.. but you wnt be spared for long.. lol..
-------------------- All my posts are based on my own opinions and not to be taken as buy/sell recommendations. Posts: 961 | Registered: May 2006
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The Munchkin Man would like to thank you for your inquiry.
You asked:
"hey munchkin, do you have any good stocks you like?.. obviously this is not one of those." _____
Actually, the Munchkin Man does like NDOL.
Please accept the Munchkin Man's humblest and sincerest apologies for his failure to make his position on NDOL clear.
The Munchkin Man's top 4 penny stock picks at this time, which the Munchkin Man has deemed worthy of a long term and profitable hold, are as follows: _____
NDOL
TDCP
TIDE
XKEM _____
The Munchkin Man has many other picks as well.
The Munchkin Man kindly invites you to visit the M* Stock Picks Forum, where the Munchkin Man makes his "home base."
The Munchkin Man's proudest achievement there has been the tutorial he wrote on how to start a Uranium stock portfolio.
Good luck to you.
Best Wishes,
Munchkin Man
Posts: 558 | From: Munchkin Man | Registered: Jun 2006
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quote:Originally posted by Relentless: Did a chemical weapon attack leave you with that annoying notion that speaking in the third person is somehow attractive?
lol relent.. how come you lost one of your stars? in the morning i saw you had 5 stars.. where did your other star go or didI simply read 5 stars by mistake? on the other topic, i have always seen MM using third person.. initially i thoguht it was too self gratifying.. gradually i realised it was his style!!
-------------------- All my posts are based on my own opinions and not to be taken as buy/sell recommendations. Posts: 961 | Registered: May 2006
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posted
LOLOL... I've been back only one day.. I assure you those little stars will all be gone within a week... Witless pumpers will be so shell shocked by my reappearance that they will clammer for the ratings function to illustrate their dread... I'm BACKKKKKKKKK..............
-------------------- Spend word for word with me and I shall make your wit bankrupt Posts: 977 | Registered: Jun 2006
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posted
hehe.. looks liek no one is giving me stars either. i had 3 with my previous id ..
anyways for the all I know about India posters of today morning.. heres todays article on cnn.com
TIME.com: India the next economic superpower?
India's influence soars The 'un-China' could be world's next economic superpower
Sunday, June 18, 2006; Posted: 10:38 a.m. EDT (14:38 GMT)
Editor's note: The following is a summary of this week's Time magazine cover story.
(Time.comexternal link) You may not be aware of it, living in the United States, but your world is increasingly being shaped by India
Even if you've never been to India, eaten its food or watched its movies, there is a good chance you interact with it every day of your life.
It might be the place on the other end of that call you call you make if your luggage is lost on a connecting flight, or the guys to whom your company has outsourced its data processing. Every night, young radiologists in Bangalore read CT scans e-mailed to them by emergency-room doctors in the U.S.
Few Americans are surprised today to learn that their dentist or lawyer is of Indian origin, and the centrality of Indian brainpower to California's high-tech industry has long been documented.
In ways big and small, Indians are changing the world, and may become even more influential in the decades ahead.
That's because India -- the second most populous nation in the world, and projected to be by 2015 the most populous -- is itself being transformed. In the tradition of writers citing Asia's "tiger" economies and the Chinese "dragon," now comes the elephant.
India's economy is growing more than 8 percent a year, and the country is modernizing so fast that old friends are bewildered by the changes that occur between visits.
The economic boom is taking place at a time when the U.S. and India are forging new ties.
During the Cold War, relations were frosty at best, as India cozied up to the Soviet Union while successive U.S. administrations armed and supported India's regional rival, Pakistan.
But in its wake, relations grew steadily closer and in 2004, the Bush administration declared India a strategic partner and proposed a bilateral deal (presently stalled in Congress) to share nuclear know-how. After decades when it hardly registered in the political or public consciousness, India looms large on Washington's world map.
Among U.S. policymakers, the new approach can be explained simply: India is the un-China. One Asian giant is run by a Communist Party that increasingly appeals to nationalism as a way of legitimating its power. The other is the world's largest democracy.
The U.S. will always have to deal with China, but it has learned that doing so is never easy with a country bristling with old resentments at the hands of the West.
India is no pushover either, but democrats are easier to talk to than communist apparatchiks. Making friends with India is a good way for the U.S. to hedge its Asia bet.
Democracy aside, there is a second way in which India is the un-China -- and it's not to India's credit. In most measures of modernization, China is way ahead.
Last year per capita income in India was $3,300; in China it was $6,800. Prosperity and progress haven't touched many of the nearly 650,000 villages where more than two-thirds of India's population lives.
Backbreaking, empty-stomach poverty, which China has been tackling successfully for decades, is still all too common in India. Education for women -- the key driver of China's rise to become the workshop of the world -- lags terribly in India.
The nation has more people with HIV/AIDS than any other in the world, but until recently the Indian government was in a disgraceful state of denial about the epidemic. Transportation networks and electrical grids, which are crucial to industrial development and job creation, are so dilapidated that it will take many years to modernize them.
Yet the litany of India's comparative shortcomings omits a fundamental truth: China started first. China's key economic reforms took shape in the late 1970s, India's not until the early 1990s.
But India is younger and freer than China. Many of its companies are already innovative world beaters. India is playing catch-up, for sure, but it has the skills, the people and the sort of hustle and dynamism that Americans respect, to do so. It deserves the new notice it has got in the U.S.
We're all about to discover: that elephant can dance.
-------------------- All my posts are based on my own opinions and not to be taken as buy/sell recommendations. Posts: 961 | Registered: May 2006
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posted
Those three look and come across as very nice people. Russians don't have that puritan under-current in their culture, so all those novelties in their office shouldn't be that offensive. I would/will gladly date Ms. Sozina for a while and make the most noblest attempt to change her ways.
Posts: 34 | Registered: Oct 2005
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quote: Last year per capita income in India was $3,300; in China it was $6,800. Prosperity and progress haven't touched many of the nearly 650,000 villages where more than two-thirds of India's population lives.
Backbreaking, empty-stomach poverty, which China has been tackling successfully for decades, is still all too common in India. Education for women -- the key driver of China's rise to become the workshop of the world -- lags terribly in India.
Alright...3,300 then. Still ain't gonna get far when gas is 4 bucks a gallon! Plus the two-thirds population that progress hasn't touched kinda gives the impression that two thirds won't be using that gas much.
Anyway the point is moot, the true point is that you ae hoping for a rerun of last month and it just ain't gonna happen. Too many questions with too many sketchy answers.
I'm not saying you won't even make money on this stock again. We all know the market doesn't work like that. I am saying that you are not sitting on a ten bagger waiting to errupt and that you should question the ethics of this company and its actions.
FOOT
-------------------- No longer eligible for government service due to lack of tax issues. Posts: 5178 | From: Up North | Registered: Dec 2005
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quote:t and that you should question the ethics of this company and its actions.
What's so shady about a company that's trying to pump oil. You make it sound like they are money launderers or something.
Posts: 34 | Registered: Oct 2005
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quote:Originally posted by Relentless: India has three working toilets.. how the hell are they going to be an economic superpower?
i hada friend who told me.. if it gets really "urgent" they go to some shady corner and take a quick leak..lol!!
-------------------- All my posts are based on my own opinions and not to be taken as buy/sell recommendations. Posts: 961 | Registered: May 2006
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"I assure you those little stars will all be gone within a week... Witless pumpers will be so shell shocked by my reappearance that they will clammer for the ratings function to illustrate their dread."
The SEC will give you a gold star for every ten times you are turned in for being a paid basher.
Soon, you will have a SEC lick & stick gold star.
I have three SEC gold stars, so far.
Long ago, I requested my stars be changed to zero stars. Even begged the boys to vote me down. Did not work. I want zero stars!
I'm not saying you won't even make money on this stock again. We all know the market doesn't work like that. I am saying that you are not sitting on a ten bagger waiting to errupt and that you should question the ethics of this company and its actions.
FOOT
oh.. no one including me is hoping a 10 bagger sitting right there about to explode and become rich within a week or two. did you forget I am long on this. and technically, long means atleast 6 months and decent 100% gain within a year.. the way i would play is.. take profits from playing other stock.. put it into stock in which you are long. I have been doing it with FRPT for about 2 months now and have been decently successful. once NDOL releases its reserves/moving to OTCBB, thats when I am looking forward to substantially add it to my longs portfolio .
-------------------- All my posts are based on my own opinions and not to be taken as buy/sell recommendations. Posts: 961 | Registered: May 2006
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quote:Originally posted by Relentless: yeah they do have a weakness for anything bovine
yep.. they worship cows and treat them as gods!!!!
-------------------- All my posts are based on my own opinions and not to be taken as buy/sell recommendations. Posts: 961 | Registered: May 2006
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quote:Originally posted by Purl Gurl: Relentless quips,
"I assure you those little stars will all be gone within a week... Witless pumpers will be so shell shocked by my reappearance that they will clammer for the ratings function to illustrate their dread."
The SEC will give you a gold star for every ten times you are turned in for being a paid basher.
Soon, you will have a SEC lick & stick gold star.
I have three SEC gold stars, so far.
Long ago, I requested my stars be changed to zero stars. Even begged the boys to vote me down. Did not work. I want zero stars!
Purl Gurl
They sent me a hat for what I did with CMKI/CMKM/CMKX a few years ago.. A coffee mug for QBID, and they owe me a t-shirt for what I am doing for GZFX now...
-------------------- Spend word for word with me and I shall make your wit bankrupt Posts: 977 | Registered: Jun 2006
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quote:Originally posted by T e x: did get a line on corporate communications...
it *is* monkey business!
cant open on my linux machine
-------------------- All my posts are based on my own opinions and not to be taken as buy/sell recommendations. Posts: 961 | Registered: May 2006
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quote:]try one of your Mac or Windows machines... [/QB]
shall try tmorrow at workplace.. hope its nothing that cannot be opened out there.. else my russian descent boss shall screw me..
-------------------- All my posts are based on my own opinions and not to be taken as buy/sell recommendations. Posts: 961 | Registered: May 2006
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posted
Hey! The SEC sent me a toy laser keyboard for my work with IBZT stock!
NDOL, only worth a gold star; too obvious of a pump and dump scam.
Tex, though, told me he plans to give me a matching set of horned toad pasties for scalping the I-Hub boys. Tex tells me those horned toad pasties stick and stay attached no matter the jiggle or other, hmm, body motions.
posted
This is interesting. This is from somebody that knows Russia and has invested there. No picture. Who cares.
From today's Chicago Tribune:
Foreign investors spooked but not scared off by Russia
By Alex Rodriguez Tribune foreign correspondent Published June 18, 2006
MOSCOW -- For foreign investors thinking of putting their money in Russia, the story of William Browder should have been seen as a shot across the bow.
Browder's $4 billion Hermitage Fund is dedicated to investing in Russia. Seven months ago, Russian authorities banned Browder from returning to Russia from London without saying why, though colleagues suspect the move amounted to payback for questions he raised about corporate governance abuses at state connected or controlled Russian energy enterprises.
And yet, Browder's plight has failed to discourage foreign investors from looking to Russia, starting with Browder himself.
"With oil prices at $70 a barrel, it's a very attractive place to invest," Browder said in a phone interview from his London office. "Judging from the flow of money from funds like mine and others into the Russian market, it's clear that people are becoming more accepting of the risks, largely because high oil prices have made investing here so appealing."
In many ways, Russia remains an unpredictable place where rules change as the game goes along, but that is not stopping investors from scrambling for a share of one of the world's most lucrative emerging markets.
Russia's boom in initial public offerings is ample proof. Last year, foreign and domestic investors poured $4.8 billion into Russian IPOs. Over the next 12 to 18 months, Russian IPOs are expected to raise an additional $20 billion. Leading the charge is this summer's IPO of Rosneft, the state-owned oil giant that was instrumental in the dismembering of Mikhail Khodorkovsky's Yukos oil firm.
The flurry of IPO activity illustrates how much distance Russia has put between itself and the ashes of the 1998 financial crisis, when investors fled and legions of working-class Russians lost their life savings.
Since then, Russia's GDP has been galloping at a healthy clip, growing 7.2 percent in 2004 and 6.4 percent last year. A 6 percent jump in GDP is projected this year. Last year, the country's stock market soared 80 percent. So far this year it's up an additional 30 percent.
This year the market has been more volatile, plunging 9.4 percent last week, its biggest drop in 18 months. Still, analysts say that in the long term, oil prices will buoy investor interest.
"Right now, few investors can afford to ignore Russia," said Andrei Gromadin, an analyst with Moscow's MDM Bank. "There is still some risk, but oil prices make the situation so attractive here that the importance of these risks get diminished."
No exact date for the Rosneft offering has been announced, but most analysts believe it will precede the July 15-17 summit of G8 leaders in St. Petersburg.
Russia, which holds the G8 chairmanship this year, has put energy security at the top of the summit agenda, and a successful Rosneft IPO would serve as an endorsement of the Kremlin strategy to regain control over the country's energy wealth.
The offering was initially structured to raise as much as $20 billion, which would have made it the largest IPO ever. However, it is now expected to be $10 billion to $13 billion and is to take place at exchanges in Moscow and London.
Some Western observers question whether the offering should take place at all. Once a middle-tier state enterprise struggling in the shadows of oil giants like Yukos and Lukoil, Rosneft instantly became a dominant force in Russia's energy sector with the controversial 2004 acquisition of Yukos' core production asset, Yuganskneftegaz.
The Kremlin drew harsh criticism internationally for skirting the rule of law in its quest to renationalize lucrative oil assets, but when the dust settled, Rosneft had become Russia's third-largest oil producer.
In an opinion piece this spring in The Moscow Times, billionaire financier George Soros said the lack of transparency surrounding Rosneft's acquisition of Yuganskneftegaz clouds Rosneft's IPO: "To argue that it will improve transparency ignores the fact that Rosneft is an instrument of the state that will always serve the political objectives of Russia in preference to the interests of the shareholders. Is Rosneft willing to put this into the prospectus?"
F&C Asset Management, a London-based investment fund, is just as wary. "Investors should tread carefully when considering investing in Rosneft," F&C said in a statement this spring. "The Russian legal regime is opaque and difficult to navigate. We don't pretend to understand it, and if we cannot understand something, we won't invest in it."
Browder's case is another example of the risks associated with investing in Russia. The U.S.-born British citizen had lived in Russia since 1996 and had a valid visa. In addition to heading the fund, he has been one of President Vladimir Putin's staunchest supporters.
When he arrived at a Moscow airport Nov. 13, authorities said his visa was no longer valid and, 15 hours later, put him on a flight back to London. Two weeks later, the government explained it had the right to bar anyone deemed a threat to "national security, order or public health."
"It's perplexing," said Browder. "I brought in $4 billion in capital and have been one of their biggest supporters in the West, and this is what happens to me."
Moscow analysts say Browder's case may be related to his campaigns to root out abuses at Gazprom, Russia's state-controlled natural gas monopoly, and Surgutneftegaz, an oil firm with Kremlin ties. Whatever the reason, banning Browder has cast doubtsabout the wisdom of investing in Russia.
In a letter addressed to Putin, London Stock Exchange chief Clara Furse warned that banning Browder "could have a negative impact on Russia's image as a country that welcomes foreign investment, and on the ability of Russian companies to raise capital outside Russia."
Other Western business people don't share Furse's pessimism. Browder is one of them.
"My opinion has always been that Russia is an imperfect country, and valuations there are deeply discounted because of those imperfections," Browder said. "You're buying assets at a 75 to 90 percent discount compared to prices in the West. Factored into that discount are all of the bad things we've been talking about--including my visa."
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ajrodriguez*tribune.com
Posts: 4245 | From: SMALLVILLE USA | Registered: May 2004
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posted
Good article. Typical that someone would bash because they failed to follow the rules and would expect another country to forgoe their policies and procedures. Happening more and more often. So how much does it cost to renew a visa in the UK? A lot cheaper than a round trip to Russia eh?
-------------------- All post are my opinion. Do your own DD. Who's clicking your buy/sell button!? Posts: 7800 | From: Virginia | Registered: May 2006
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quote:Originally posted by Purl Gurl: The boys become flushed and hot over Julia V. Sozina, vice president of North West Oil Group,
You boys are flirting with high danger! She is a woman who will empty your pockets and you will be happy she did.
Silly boys, you know so little about body language other than, "Does she giggle? Does she jiggle? Does she wiggle?"
Have look at Ernest Malyshev.
Do not just look. You are to look very close.
He is a pretentious jet setter. He surrounds himself with exotic riches. A griffin over on his left, a crystal Rubic's cube, telling, a gold elephant. Most telling of all, a gold stapler. Well padded modern leather chair, ivory inlay desktop, leather writing pad, tall store bought plant in the background, expensive modern art hanging behind him.
Now look at him. Right off, a deliberate eye catcher, a very large watch, probably a ten grand watch. Miami Vice casual jacket, sport shirt and soft manicure fresh hands. This man is cool, is slick, is a silver tongued devil and a womanizer. Too bad about his being bald.
In America, this guy would be driving a brand new red Corvette convertable, top down, wearing shades above a shirt unbuttoned to his navel and a gold chained medaillion resting upon a rather fat Neandertal hairy belly.
He is spending investor money like crazy, on himself, jet setting all over Europe.
Victor Generalov. This man is hard core Russian mafia with old KGB connections. He is a hard line politburo member, Putin's inside man.
His suit is custom made, wide lapels with bold yet subtle pin strips. Perfect color matching shirt and tie, custom cut shirt with semi-formal cuffs. No doubt, silver or gold cuff links given to him by an indebted person.
Bare walls behind him, coldly spartan as Glavnoe Upravlenie Lagerei, a Gulag labor camp in Siberia. A panther ready to pounce from an equally spartan jade perch. Notice his jade coasters, a setting for four. Close by a jade cigarette lighter and jade ashtray. Both are for old party line smokers who visit his office to cut power deals.
Cell phone next to his right hand, which rings when his muscle calls. No writing pad. He does not take orders, he gives orders just as cold as his eyes.
This man will have you killed and none will ever ask any questions.
So she makes you hot and bothered?
Julia Sozina will empty your wallet, your savings account, with nothing more than a wiggle of her little finger.
An exceptionally handsome well built woman who never jiggles unless nude. Few men have seen her nude.
Look at her office. Zero decorations. She is hard core no nonsense business. Modern but utilitarian office chair, ordinary desk with a large writing area, computer desk and a printer / fax close at hand.
Her clothes, masculine authority cut. Well matched colors but deep in-control colors. Blouse with wide lapels to accent her face, unbuttoned just enough to distract men but closed behind a high buttoned custom cut masculine business suit. No jewerly and perfect fitting blouse cuffs.
A very sharp shrewd business woman. Cool, calculating eyes, strong jaw and a strong chin surrounding a hint of a smile with slight downturned corners of 'I am in charge" gesture. Her hair is ultra professional. Bangs to impart she is a girl but clear of her forehead and eyes. Rest of her hair is pulled back and tied to keep it out of her way during her hustle and bustle work day.
She drinks fine wines, eats eloquent food but eats very lightly and she dines alone.
Pen in hand held in a weapon ready manner, large notepad and her left hand ready to push herself away from her desk. She is a mover and a shaker, a wheeler and a dealer.
Sozina is the brains behind this outfit. She runs this company with tight control and cold calculating shrewdness.
She will not harm you but she will have your money in a flash and she will vanish in a flash.
She has millions hidden away in Switzerland. Her wealth is greather than the two other men, combined. She is very wealthy and not satisfied she is wealthy enough.
You boys should know better than flirt with a woman like her. She has brass balls and will have yours, instantly. She is colder than even me, and about as wealthy.
Purl Gurl - giggles, jiggles and wiggles
______
Boy Oh Boy!
Wait until the Munchkin Man sends a copy of this post to Mr. Parkin and to the headquarters of the North-West Oil Group!
Best Wishes,
Munchkin Man
Posts: 558 | From: Munchkin Man | Registered: Jun 2006
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quote:Originally posted by Relentless: Did a chemical weapon attack leave you with that annoying notion that speaking in the third person is somehow attractive?
posted
keep the stars i want to make money. btw, it looks like XKEM might be a good gapper this am. thanks mm. i don't know about you guys, but i hope i have not contributed to any of those three NDOL "execs" living high on the hog. GLTA
-------------------- I'm from Missouri - Show Me! Posts: 950 | From: Middle of Nowhere, Missouri | Registered: May 2006
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posted
Thats what oil company execs do , they live in great comfort, because oil makes money. A lot of money.
Posts: 4245 | From: SMALLVILLE USA | Registered: May 2004
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-------------------- All my posts are based on my own opinions and not to be taken as buy/sell recommendations. Posts: 961 | Registered: May 2006
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quote:Originally posted by ruskin_muskin: up 4.35%..
Thats as sweet as candy. I have 3 stocks that are up today and I didn't get a single one of them from the nudie crusader or any of her sidekicks.
Posts: 4245 | From: SMALLVILLE USA | Registered: May 2004
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