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Sure, I'll take $30 a share for my MNUM. Man would that be sweet.
one of the best comparable for this type of company is TASR...here's a chart that could give us a taste of what could happen to MNUM once they start delivering on the revenue side. -Gecko
This has been extremely fun so far. I can't wait for more news to see what this stock can do.
Today's PR was a warm up. They had to file an 8-k with that so the PR was inevitable. Expect lots more news in the coming days/weeks here. Clearly the stock is getting alot of action and is definitely in play.
IMO this is just the first pr in a string to come out and explode this PPS up up and away, small and very tightly held stock here
I think something good going on, first sign bringing experienced board members
I agree. I think this PR is just the start of it. Should be a fun ride.
MNUM: looking good and just starting to warm up.
Monumental Marketing Inc. Appoints Two New Board Members
Oct 18, 2007 1:06:00 PM
Copyright Business Wire 2007
LAS VEGAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Monumental Marketing Inc. (OTC BB: MNUM) has appointed Malcolm S. Taub and Edward Agabs to its Board. Together, they bring almost 50 years of legal, finance, security, and management expertise to the company.
Mr. Taub is a successful lawyer with 33 years of experience addressing all levels of business and legal issues. He has expertise in the interactive relationships of business, finance, technology, real estate and securities law. He has provided consulting services to the Market Surveillance Department of the New York Stock Exchange and the Stock Exchange of Buenos Aires, Argentina. He has served as an Adjunct Professor of Law at numerous universities, including New York University. Mr. Taub founded Fairbanks International and its predecessor in the year 1992.
Mr. Agabs is the CFO of Full Circle Capital, an Asset Based Lending Hedge Fund based in Stamford, CT. He is a seasoned financial professional with over 15 years experience in financial management, holding positions for nonprofit and profit organizations.
"We are very excited with these appointments," said Monumental Marketing's CEO Haim Karo. He added, "Their knowledge, skills, experience, and highly regarded reputations will help serve the Company and its shareholders well as we build global distribution for the Company's products."
The Company's premier patented product is the BOUNCER(TM), a less than lethal short range defensive weapon that permits law enforcement, private security, and private individuals to incapacitate an assailant without inflicting severe injury.
Monumental Marketing Inc. owns 100% of SAFER-T Advanced Securities Technologies, a developer and manufacturer of the BOUNCER(TM) as seen at website www.safer-t.com
This press release includes "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. In addition to statements which explicitly describe such risks and uncertainties, readers are urged to consider statements labeled with the terms "believes," "belief," "expects," "intends," "anticipates," "will," or "plans" to be uncertain and forward looking. The forward-looking statements contained herein are also subject generally to other risks and uncertainties that are described from time to time in the company's reports and registration statements filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Source: Monumental Marketing Inc.
----------------------------------------------
Princeton Research
Inc.
Las Vegas
Mike King
702-650-3000
mike@princetonresearch.com
volume should roll in slowly but surely...
(I am GUESSing about 20+ K for volume today (apx)
This stock, has been strong so far and under the radar, the chart looks phenomenal and with the Technology this company has IMO this stock will be moving very fast very soon.
Not much volume today for some reason. Maybe we see some later on.
just got rollin' over here this morning...
YEP, on the ground floor of another winner IMO
LOOKING VERY VERY GOOD BOYS. HOPEFULLY WE WILL GET A FEW ANNOUNCEMENTS FROM THE COMPANY REGARDING ORDERS, OR A.T.F. APPROVAL. IF WE CAN GET SOMETHING GOOD, WE CAN PROBABLY ROCK AND ROLL TO $2.00 PRETTY QUICKLY............
MNUM definitely an undiscovered winner
Thanks davidh. I just look for undiscovered winners!!! That's it!!
MNUM MOMENTUM BUILDING CHART LOOKS INCREDIBLE!!
You're welcome, but the credit goes to BHS. He has good plays and support them too.
This is so exciting watching this stock. Thanks again BHS!!!
MNUM: good accumulation going on before it breaks out
Non-lethal weapons being developed
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/columnist/ccyau004.htm
John Yaukey
WASHINGTON - In Seattle, unruly demonstrators disrupting World Trade Organization talks clashed with police.
Halfway around the world in Kosovo, U.S. peacekeepers faced stone-throwing mobs.
Gunfire as a response in either case could have proven disastrous - and wasn't used.
But police and soldiers in both confrontations had at their disposal a new, and some say controversial, arsenal of weapons designed to sting, stun, entrap, immobilize, sicken, knock the wind out of - but not kill - the assailants, suspects, agitators or enemies they are used against.
They're referred to collectively as non-lethal weapons, and police and military units are increasingly using them as they try to limit the use of deadly force and successfully negotiate small, often urban conflicts.
In these skirmishes subduing or dispersing a hostile force can be far more effective than eliminating it, especially if it's virtually indistinguishable from non-hostiles, or mixed in with innocents, as was the case during the 1995 U.S. deployment to Somalia where bystanders were used by marauding gangs as human shields.
Many of the nation's major urban police forces, from Boston and New York to Los Angeles, already use some of these weapons, or are considering them, especially in the wake of high-profile cases where they have been accused of misusing deadly force.
Smart guns in the near future
WASHINGTON - The ubiquitous computer chip has found yet another ''dumb'' device that could benefit from some its silicon smarts: the handgun.
Several of the nation's gun makers are experimenting with ''smart guns'' that would fire only if the user is able to activate the weapon with new chip-based technologies now under development.
One model requires the user be wearing a wristwatch-like device that sends a radio signal to the weapon, ''waking it up.'' If the gun is taken away from the user wearing the wristband and is not close enough to receive the radio signal, it's useless.
Another features a matchbox-sized thumb print identifier that locks into the gun handle and prohibits firing unless it approves of the user's thumb print. The print identifier must be inserted to complete an electronic circuit necessary for firing.
Other simpler models use keypunch codes that lock the firing mechanisms or magnetized rings worn on the finger that unlock the gun.
''Miniaturizing the technology so it can fit onto the weapon without changing the way it operates or compromising its reliability has been the challenge in developing this,'' said David Boyd, director of the Office of Science and Technology for the National Institute of Justice.
The NIJ has funded much of the research on smart guns.
The weapons are being developed at the behest of law enforcement so police officers' weapons can't be taken and used against them.
According to the Justice Department, one in six officers who are shot are wounded or killed with their own weapons.
But with growing concerns over gun violence, smart guns will likely find plenty of demand among consumers as well, and some gun makers recognize that.
Smith & Wesson has committed to putting smart weapons on the market in three years.
At its training ground in Quantico, Va., the Marine Corps conducts regular exercises with non-lethal weapons, some of them still classified.
Non-lethal weapons range from the simple - modernized string-and-ball bolas used for centuries by South American cowboys to tangle the legs of wayward cattle - to highly technical, new devices that nauseate by shaking the internal organs with sound or mildly cooking them with microwaves.
''Americans have a strong aversion to fatalities,'' said Ron Madrid, a former Marine Corps officer who helped establish the Institute for Non-Lethal Defense Technologies at Pennsylvania State University. ''And that's going to drive the development and use of these devices.''
Most of the research on non-lethals is being done in conjunction with the Defense Department through its Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Directorate, a Marine Corps-operated program with a $25 million annual budget, or by small companies looking to market new weapons, mainly to law enforcement.
So far, most of the non-lethal weapons in use consist of devices that deliver a traumatic blow like the bean bags fired from shotguns, or a debilitating electrical shock, or a chemical irritant like pepper spray.
While there is nothing terribly new about these methods of confronting an adversary, new delivery systems make them far more potent.
Pepper spray, for example, traditionally dispensed from a handheld aerosol dispenser, is now available to law enforcement in grenade form. The grenade breaks apart with a mild charge, scattering pellets that quickly release pepper spray in all directions.
Electroshock, or cattle prod, weapons that once required close contact with an assailant can now spit out bits of metal up to 30 feet that stick and deliver a debilitating charge.
But it's what's in the R&D pipeline that's raising eyebrows, and objections among some human rights groups.
At the Los Alamos National Laboratories, for example, scientists are developing lasers for temporarily blinding opponents. The prototype weapon emits a continuous visible light beam that has the same effects as an oncoming car's high beams, only some types can cause permanent blindness.
Special forces units in Somalia in 1995 had considered using these, but decided the risk of permanent blindness was too high.
At the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee, scientists are experimenting with a modified shotgun that fires a charge of water and aluminum pellets, which can ''stun, disable, or destroy'' an enemy.
Even more advanced, and controversial, are the sonic and microwave weapons under development.
Scientists are experimenting with a variety of megaphone-like devices that emit sound waves capable of knocking over an adversary with a violent shock wave.
More advanced sonic weapons cause the adversary's internal organs to vibrate, inducing a crippling nausea and severe pain.
Some of the most exotic experiments entail harnessing microwaves, the very same used in microwave ovens, to induce almost instant fevers or seizures by heating the body to as much as 107 degrees.
Just as with a TV dinner, the microwaves, fired from a TV dish-like instrument, cause water molecules in the body to vibrate faster than normal, which generates heat.
While many of these weapons are highly effective, they have also raised considerable concerns among some scientific organizations - as well as human rights groups.
First, some of these groups say, there is no guarantee that non-lethal weapons are always non-lethal, and even non-lethal advocates concede that. Some technologies used under the wrong circumstances or without proper training could easily kill.
What's more, some are capable of inducing effects such as permanent blindness that are inconsistent with common international standards of humane treatment. Many are being developed in secret and are not being tested to the satisfaction of human rights groups.
''We are not against non-lethal weapons as a technology - you have to look at each technology and see what does or doesn't make sense,'' said Steve Goose, director of the arms division at Human Rights Watch, the largest U.S.-based human rights organization. ''But with some of these systems there clearly needs to be more testing on the effects than there is, and that information needs to be less secret than a lot of it is.''
And even within the military strategic and policy community, there is criticism that non-lethal force is, at best, only useful in highly specific situations such as where chaotic crowds can easily be dispersed or where there is no organized force prepared to retaliate with lethal force.
In some instances, they argue non-lethal force can be counterproductive.
''Are you going to actually encourage the violence you're intending to restrain because your adversary knows you're committed to a non-lethal approach?'' said Steven Aftergood, a weapons policy analyst with the Washington-based Federation of American Scientists. ''You may end up with more violence rather than less violence, and you could make the outbreak of conflict more, rather than less, likely.''
And, as with any weapon, there is the fear they will fall into the wrong hands.
Stun guns and other temporary immobilizers would give criminals a powerful new option to commit crimes without the fear of capital reprisals or life sentences they would risk with a firearm.
But many police organizations and the military clearly believe this emerging, non-lethal technology has a place in the wars against crime and enemies of the future.
''Non-lethal weapons provide important options between doing too much and too little,'' said John Alexander, a former Green Beret and author of Future War: Non-Lethal Weapons in 21st Century Warfare. ''In Somalia we ended up killing ... people and our mission was to feed them.''
John Yaukey writes a weekly column for the Gannett News Service.
Copyright © 2000 Gannett News Service.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PPS will run much higher with the great technology this company has
up 4.55% 1.14x1.15 nice tight spread and volume increasing
moving higher each day i like the bids and thin offers
Bids were stacking here all day. Should be fun to watch.
tight spread and strong bids and great company = a winner stock for us IMO
I love the way this one is moving, by the looks of level 2 the sky is the limit on this one
yes i really like what i am seeing in this one
Looking very good. I like what I see. With a little volume we shoot up big time.
Nice little day on this one, looks like its just getting started
Nice float. Followed a friend here. Picked up a few shares. GLA
lEVEL 2 THIN ON THIS ONE WE COULD SEE THAT 5 MARK IN A FLASH imo
This one has huge potential, we could be sitting on another TASR
This one is starting to move now.
MNUM- volume coming in, spoke w company, supposingly news and ATF are going to be coming soon, regarding ATF and if they are going to approve the produce................ if approved, we could see a 5.00 stock
I got this stock from a friend of mine who follows alot of technology plays from Israel. Otherwise I would have never noticed it pre-news. Should be interesting to watch in the coming weeks to see what happens here.
Should be a very interesting week. I can't wait to see what Monday brings.
WOW Blue that is a Low float, Look at level 2 it is very thin
Float here is about 3M. Very tightly held stock. Watching for VOLUME next week to buy.
Low float and some pr's with nice orders = higher pps on this one IMO
Thanks BHS, for keeping us inform
Very interesting.....Stock will probably start trading soon!!
I hear that the wait is almost over.
I THINK THIS IS GOING TO BE THE WEEK. SUPPOSSINGLY THEY ARE GETTING ORDERS FOR THERE SAFER-T PRODUCT.........
no chit. been ZZZZZZZZZZZZZ here for a bit now.
Thanks BHS. Can't wait till this takes off.
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