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i really like the weekly on it
today csco went and did a breakout above 26.00 so i jumped in on some june calls hope all is well if this market wants to run i will ride it
hello mr big
today i went in on csco calls 27.00 for june it break out of 26 is why
hello is anyone watching bqi ? had a nice run last two days hoping for a small pull back to let me get on before the next leg
think u got one there jake are you in it ? how u feeling ?
clowns yea thats about right pump didnt go up very high
watch that .81 on mcz it is resistance and needs to break through it imo
lemmy didnt u play this one MCZ
in chat
hmmm what else has sales internationaly Mc Donalds ?
anyone buy a ticket ? up 28 % today
one more to watch THC
one to watch POZN
sorry cant post charts yet
lemmy
" WON'T BUY ANOTHER SINGLE SHARE OF THIS POS UNTIL IT STARTS BEHAVING. MAYBE I'LL BUY MORE IN THE 0.30'S. MAYBE."
lemmy so u think the stock will start behaving in the 0.30's ?
(when i turned 30 i didnt behave ) lol
back from mexico but pc not working right working on it hope to be back posting soon whats everone looking at ?
thank you
hi sg
yes im a forex wannabee so im reading tonight and will open a play acct any help on the chart setting tia
hello chart
what u got going ? Any A+ stocks out there ?
Why u making that call lemmy ? What u looking at ?
Bud u always have a good play going whats on the fire ?
good for u bud happy bday
hello everyone
Whats everyone looking at on this red fri ? we buying ? selling ? or holding ?
nice little stock u got there when i get back lets find some more
hey old fart didnt this happen in the 70s too ??
Traffic Jam: Truckers Protest Fuel Costs
Tuesday April 1, 7:06 pm ET
By Jeffrey Gold, Associated Press Writer
Truckers Pull Rigs Off Road, Others Slow to Crawl in Loosely Organized Protest of Fuel Prices
RIDGEFIELD, N.J. (AP) -- Tons of freight idled across the country Tuesday as independent truckers pulled their rigs off the road while others slowed to a crawl on major highways in a loosely organized protest of high fuel prices.
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Using CB radios and trucking Web sites, some truckers called for a strike Tuesday to protest the high cost of diesel fuel, hoping the action might pressure President Bush to stabilize prices by using the nation's oil reserves.
"The gas prices are too high," said Lamont Newberne, a trucker from Wilmington, N.C., who along with 200 drivers protested at a New Jersey Turnpike service area. "We don't make enough money to pay our bills and take care of our family."
On the Turnpike, southbound rigs "as far as the eye can see" staged a short lunchtime protest by moving about 20 mph near Newark, jamming traffic on one of the nation's most heavily traveled highways, authorities said.
By day's end, the protests ended up scattered; Major trucking companies were not on board, and Teamsters union officials and the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association denied organizing the protests.
Federal law prohibits the association from calling for a strike because it is a trade association.
Meanwhile in Washington, top executives of the five biggest U.S. oil companies said they know high prices are hurting consumers but deflected any blame and argued their profits -- $123 billion last year -- were in line with other industries.
Clayton Boyce, spokesman for the American Trucking Association, said diesel prices are the worst he's seen but said his organization does not support or condone the strike.
His group is pushing for a number of measures to keep the prices down or to otherwise help truckers, including allowing exploration of oil-rich areas of the U.S. that are now off limits and setting a 65 mph national speed limit.
Newberne said a typical run carrying produce from Lakeland, Fla., to the Hunt's Point Market in The Bronx, N.Y., had cost $600 to $700 a year ago. It now runs him $1,000.
Outside Chicago, three truck drivers were ticketed for impeding traffic on Interstate 55, driving three abreast at low speeds, the state police said. About 30 truckers drove in a convoy around metropolitan Atlanta at low speeds, police said.
Near Florida's Port of Tampa, more than 50 tractor-trailer rigs sat idle as their drivers demanded that contractors pay them more to cover their fuel and other costs.
"We can no longer haul their stuff for what they're paying," said David Santiago, 35, a trucker for the past 17 years.
Charles Rotenbarger, 49, a trucker from Columbus, Ohio, said he felt helpless.
"The oil company is the boss, what are we going to be able to do about it?" said Rotenbarger, who was at a truck stop at Baldwin, Fla., about 20 miles west of Jacksonville. "The whole world economy is going to be controlled by the oil companies. There's nothing we can do about it."
Jimmy Lowry, 51, of St. Petersburg, Fla., and others said it costs about $1 a mile to drive one of the big rigs, although some companies are offering as little as 87 cents a mile. Diesel cost $4.03 a gallon at the truck stop.
Rather than join the protests, some truckers were forced to sit idle because of shippers' fears of a possible strike.
In western Michigan, independent trucker William Gentry had been scheduled to pick up a load and take it to Boston, but his dispatcher told him there was a change of plans.
"She told me that her shipper was shutting down," fearing that someone would sabotage deliveries if their drivers worked during the protest, Gentry said at the Tulip City Truck Stop outside Holland, Mich.
He and Bob Sizemore, 55, a 30-year veteran trucker, decided to return to their homes in Ohio, 280-mile trips that would cost each one about $200 of their own money for fuel alone.
"We can't ride around here looking for freight," said Gentry, 47, a driver for 23 years.
If something isn't done about fuel prices, the cost of consumer goods will shoot up, Gentry said. "People aren't seeing that the more we pay, the more they're going to pay."
Associated Press writers Tom Hester Jr., in Trenton, Geoff Mulvihill in Mount Laurel, Anthony McCartney in Tampa, Fla., James Prichard in Holland, Mich., Ron Word in Baldwin, Fla., and April Castro in Dallas contributed to this report.
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good to see u bud be back in a week talk then ok
YABBA DABBA DOOO TO MEXICOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
tpph
mmg k
nxtm
jrp can it take out .74 i think so
nice and a nice run
12 % today not bad would of liked more vol
utiw
cool ken look at the 15 min chart
ok u keep having your fun but this summer im going have my
Temperature: 57°F 14°C
Conditions: Mostly Cloudy
Winds: NW 9 MPH NW 14 KPH
Relative Humidity: 55%
Barometer: 29.82 Rising
Visibility: 10.00 Miles 16.09 Kilometers
Feels Like: 57°F n/a
maybe its like washing your hands u need both to get one done ?
When you smile - I will know you finally got laid.
ok let me see if im getting this right first it was buttock cleavage then it was pregnant and this is all tied into piggish people ??????? cherry pepsi my a$$
ok thats nice but where u going with this ? Are we mooning someone ?
can u send some up for the weekend pleaseeeeeeeeeeee
Temperature: 45°F 7°C
Conditions: Cloudy
Winds: E 8 MPH E 13 KPH
Relative Humidity: 76%
Barometer: 30.00 Steady
Visibility: 10.00 Miles 16.09 Kilometers
Feels Like: 40°F n/a