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Yup, 50% would be conservative.
I have friends who have just bought or are about to buy a house... all are encouraging me to do so as well.
I keep trying to explain how bad a choice that is right now.
Yup, last I heard dilution was a bad thing.
What they are preparing to do now is similar to a reverse split.
It's their way of consolidating their holdings and reducing ours.
Ummmm...
You sure that's a good thing?
You sure?
Elsewhere as well.
Central banks are trying to replay the 1920's.
It's a consolidation move on their behalf.
Yup, but no no they're not initiating another arms race.... just as we aren't with our missle shield.
Should be an interesting year upcoming.
Got the US nuking Iran and Israel nuking Syria.
There's just no way this can go wrong...
Todays dose of happy news:
Report: Israel spots nuclear installations in Syria
Washington official says Israeli surveillance shows possible Syrian nuclear installation stocked by North Korea, Israeli Arab newspaper claims target of alleged raid last week was Syrian missile base financed by Iran
Israel believes that North Korea has been supplying Syria and Iran with nuclear materials, a Washington defense official told the New York Times. "The Israelis think North Korea is selling to Iran and Syria what little they have left," he said.
The official added that recent Israeli reconnaissance flights over Syria revealed possible nuclear installations that Israeli officials estimate might have been supplied with material from North Korea.
Meanwhile on Wednesday the Nazareth-based Israeli Arab newspaper The Assennara cited anonymous Israeli sources as saying that Israeli jets "bombed a Syrian-Iranian missile base in northern Syria that was financed by Iran... It appears that the base was completely destroyed."
According to the Times, American officials confirmed Tuesday that Israeli jets launched an airstrike inside Syria. Sources said that Israel struck at least one target in northeastern Syria, but could not provide more details.
The most likely target was, according to some administration officials, weapon caches sent by Iran to Hizbullah through Syria.
North Korea commented on the incident Tuesday, calling it a "dangerous provocation", Chinese News Agency Xinhua reported on Tuesday.
"This is a very dangerous provocation little short of wantonly violating the sovereignty of Syria and seriously harassing the regional peace and security," a North Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman said.
"The Democratic People's Republic of Korea strongly denounces the above-said intrusion and extends full support and solidarity to the Syrian people in their just cause to defend the national security and the regional peace."
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Syria warns flyovers will have tragic consequences
Damascus warns that international community's silence on Israel's violation of Syrian airspace will have tragic consequences
Roee Nahmias
Syria revved up Tuesday its rhetoric on Israel's reported violation of Syrian airspace by warning the United Nations that the international community's silence over the incident could have "tragic consequences."
In a letter sent to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, Syria warns Israel that its "outrageous aggression" will have serious consequences.
Syria "insists that the continuing silence of the international community vis-à-vis Israel's illegal act will place the region as well as the peace and security of both countries in the face of uncontrollable tragedies," read the letter.
A copy of the letter was also sent to the Security Council.
"Israel is determined to choose aggression instead of peace and by doing so it reveals its true intentions that it tries to hide using fake claims of seeking peace in the region," the letter said.
The Syrian government said last week that Israeli jets entered Syria's airspace from the Mediterranean Sea and jettisoned fuel tanks near the Turkish border when intercepted by Syrian air-defense systems.
Israel has remained silent on the incident.
I'm chasing... won't be long.
Now that's cutting edge.
I don't think there will.
Before he gets the chance to do another he will close the doors and turn this company into something entirely different.
Movies through the mail is a dying enterprise with movie downloads on the horizon.
He will not be able to offer any movies that have any demand... much like the pointless gfTV thing he tried.
Maybe two of worth.. one around .01 and another little bounce in the .005 range.
But it's doubtful he can muster another big pump like two years ago.
The trade at .01 I'll be watching for but I'm not holding my breath for the second.
I would say there is only one or two trades left on this one for a year or two.
Should be able to buy around .01 and get a triple or so... Judging from the R/S' I've witnessed.
After that?
Nothing for a long time.
Funny isn't it?
Just who it was who was really trying to help.
I understand that, my point isn't their current agreement.
JF will have gone through that money rather quickly I'm sure.
He will need to extend that agreement or get a new one.
25 mill doesn't go so far these days(If 25 mil wasn't the number, forgive me I don't remember what it was... been a while)...
These pennies exist because they can sell shares at a whim to hoards of greed mongers hopeful to hit the next 20 bagger.
JF doesn't have that now after he has so completely screwed every last one of his investors.
There are too many investors out there that will be all too eager to bash this company when the next pump and dump comes along...
Thought I was bad?
Just wait till there are a thousand just like me when the next "big" PR hits the wire.
Yeah but I don't see GGI's ability to sell shares like before...
A fact I'm certain they are aware of.
They won't be so willing to lend money when they know there is little if any demand for the shares they want to sell.
Granted he has some of it covered with the ticker change... DDers won't be capable of pulling up info on past failures... Much like what he did when he changed it from PGHI almost four years ago.
Yeah they all say that.
Never works out that way though.
So what's his move now?
He's pretty much screwed himself as far as financing goes.
He won't be able to sell another investor on this company for atleast a year or two considering the short attention span of penny investors.
I just am not seeing a way out of this for him...
Wick is there a rational explanation for the R/S?
Is there a bright side?
There is bright news here for any short term players left.
There will be a dead cat bounce in the next week or two.
Watch for it and you might be able to make a few bucks off this scam company.
LOLOL
Reverse split?
Dear dear, who could have known?
Too bad no one was warned almost two years ago.
The tab that says membership.
Nightly
The only thing that can stop them is us...
We have to stop them while we can... while there is more of us than them.
Currently they just don't have the manpower to encircle us completely... But they will soon.
All they need is another 9/11 event... only bigger, and they'll have all the furry they'll need to enact any laws they want.
Not only that but they'll have millions of recruits eager to defend the homeland.
Everyone should read what little they can of the second patriot act.
What they can because it is classified... ever heard of sweeping legislation that is classified???
Well it is.
The word terrorism is being redefined to mean any felony that could cause harm or injury.
That means all of them.. from speeding tickets to manslaughter.
Minimum punishment under this new legislation would be life in prison.
We are being circled.
I'm not the greatest employee...
I'm not the greatest husband...
I'm not the greatest parent...
I'm not the greatest trader...
But I can spot a scam from a mile away in the fog...
This is a scam.
found it on shoutwire last night.
It is all too real a painting of what our future could very well be.
January 5, 2020
Things are different in the year 2020. As projected in the early part of the century, the World Wide Web has grown to epic proportions. Everything is online these days: shopping, education, social communities… even sex. It is now known, as it has been touted by the corporations in charge, as “The Network”. However, to those of us who remember the good old days of freedom, it resembles something more like a cold Siberian prison cell.
ISP’s, backed by ridiculous government regulations and overzealous senators, have completely taken over. Who you pay for internet service determines which company’s “channel” you can view. Websites are a thing of the past. Things like licensing fees and access costs have cut the little guys out of the equation. What used to be free expression on the internet is now reserved for the rich. We used to run this place… now we watch from the sidelines as those in power have taken yet another medium and turned it into their pulpit from which to preach the foul-smelling propaganda that we came here to escape in the first place.
I remember when it happened. We all thought it was a joke at first, this “police force” created by the UN to keep order on the web. “Overzealous *******s!” we would tell them, “Go back to Geneva and eat **** on a stick, you fagblower. You have no power here!” At first, they didn’t have any power. All they could do was “report” us and all was good.
Then the US and EU, in conjunction with the UN, passed the “Freenet” act of 2012. The name was misleading. It had nothing to do with freedom. It gave ISP’s the legal right to filter accessible websites. It was a right they used expediently, thoroughly, and with great prejudice. Webmasters were required to pay a fee for users from certain ISP’s to be able to visit their sites. That is, if they weren’t on the black list. (I was) The only folks who could afford the steep prices were corporations which began to dub their websites “channels”. Of course there was a loud rebellion. That’s where the UN’s “internet police” came in…
They were hired by ISP’s and corporate websites to keep things calm. They were like moderators of sorts, except with the power to shut off your internet service with the click of a mouse. Being banned from one of the corporate websites for an off-color comment now meant losing internet service altogether. They used it often (Some say too often) and it worked. The ruffians of the web were silenced.
Despite their success with the social control aspect of the web, the powers that be still couldn’t stop file sharing. Instant messaging became a virtual hub for the pirates of the internet. Underground networks flourished as people flocked to the last island of freedom left in the electronic world where we once got away with pretty much anything.
It was July 4th, 2015, (Independence Day, ironically) that was the beginning of the end for file sharing. The Internet Police, some say working with the MPAA, released a sophisticated virus onto the IM networks that would actually set a victims hard drive on fire. Several of the larger pirate networks were targeted. The “IP” referred to the action as a “sting” and dubbed it “Operation Fireball”. It was the first of many. Soon, people just stopped.
Fear rules these days. It has become impossible to live without being connected to the network in some way. Soccer moms and religious nuts love it. Guys like me… well, every time I log on for one reason or the other I just get this empty feeling. Almost like there was something we could have done all those years ago. The sweet taste of freedom still lingers somewhere in the back of my mind. It nearly stings me to action…
It is far too late though. If only I could go back in time and somehow get through to people how important it was that we protected the internet as we once knew it. It really was worth fighting for. Hmm… I guess you only realize that about something after you have already lost it.
Authors note: This is admittedly a ridiculous future… or is it?
yup I just got an email from them proclaiming the very same thing.. That website however states seven hundred grand.
FXCM only has seven hundred grand???
Wow
I would imagine that before too much longer forex brokers and traders will be regulated much like equities brokers and traders are. We'll all have to find overseas brokers in the future.
Drop Foreseen in Median Price of U.S. Homes
By DAVID LEONHARDT and VIKAS BAJAJ
The median price of American homes is expected to fall this year for the first time since federal housing agencies began keeping statistics in 1950.
Economists say the decline, which could be foreshadowed in a widely followed government price index to be released this week, will probably be modest — from 1 percent to 2 percent — but could continue in 2008 and 2009. Rather than being limited to the once-booming Northeast and California, price declines are also occurring in cities like Chicago, Minneapolis and Houston, where the increases of the last decade were modest by comparison.
The reversal is particularly striking because many government officials and housing-industry executives had said that a nationwide decline would never happen, even though prices had fallen in some coastal areas as recently as the early 1990s.
While the housing slump has already rattled financial markets, it has so far had only a modest effect on consumer spending and economic growth. But forecasters now believe that its impact will lead to a slowdown over the next year or two.
“For most people, this is not a disaster,” said Nigel Gault, an economist with Global Insight, a research firm in Waltham, Mass. “But it’s enough to cause them to pull back.”
In recent years, many families used their homes as a kind of piggy bank, borrowing against their equity and increasing their spending more rapidly than their income was rising. A recent research paper co-written by the vice chairman of the Federal Reserve said that the rise in home prices was the primary reason that consumer borrowing has soared since 2001.
Now, however, that financial cushion is disappearing for many families. “We are having to start from scratch and rebuild for a down payment,” said Kenneth Schauf, who expects to lose money on a condominium in Chicago he and his wife bought in 2004 and have been trying to sell since last summer. “We figured that a home is the place to build your wealth, and now it’s going on three years and we are back to square one.”
On an inflation-adjusted basis, the national median price — the level at which half of all homes are more expensive and half are less — is not likely to return to its 2007 peak for more than a decade, according to Moody’s Economy.com, a research firm.
Unless the real estate downturn is much worse than economists are expecting, the declines will not come close to erasing the increases of the last decade. And for many families who do not plan to move, the year-to-year value of their house matters little. The drop is, of course, good news for home buyers.
It does, however, contradict the widely held notion that there is no such thing as a nationwide housing slump. A 2004 report jointly written by the top economists at five organizations — the industry groups for real estate agents, home builders and community bankers, as well as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the large government-sponsored backers of home mortgages — was typical. It said that “there is little possibility of a widespread national decline since there is no national housing market.”
Top government officials were more circumspect but still doubted that the prices would decline nationally. Alan Greenspan, the former Fed chairman, said the housing market was not susceptible to bubbles, in part because every local market is different.
In 2005, Ben S. Bernanke, then an adviser to President Bush and now the Fed chairman, said “strong fundamentals” were the main force behind the rise in prices. “We’ve never had a decline in housing prices on a nationwide basis,” he added.
But Global Insight, the research firm, estimates that the home-price index to be released Thursday by the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, a regulatory agency, will show a decline of about 1 percent between the first and second quarter of this year. Other forecasters predict that the index will rise slightly in the second quarter before falling later this year.
In all, Global Insight expects a decline of 4 percent, or roughly 10 percent in inflation-adjusted terms, between the peak earlier this year and the projected low point in 2009. In California, prices are expected to decline 16 percent — or about 20 percent after taking inflation into account.
The government’s index, which compares the sales price of individual homes over time, is intended to describe the actual value of a typical house. Since the index began in 1975, it has slipped from one quarter to the next on a few occasions, but it has never fallen over a full year.
Another index dating back to 1950, calculated by Freddie Mac, has also never shown an annual decline. Price data published by the National Association of Realtors, based on the prices of houses sold in a given year, have also never declined. According to the association, the median home price is now about $220,000.
Mr. Schauf and his wife, Leslie Suarez, put their condo in the Sheridan Park neighborhood of Chicago up for sale shortly before moving to Texas last year so he could take a new job. They bought the two-bedroom unit in September 2004 for $255,000, with a 5 percent down payment. They redid the floors, installed new window treatments and repainted the walls.
They said they expected the condo to sell quickly. Instead, they have cut the price several times and have yet to receive an offer. The current list price is $279,000, though they expect to settle for less.
Without the money for a new down payment, they are renting an apartment in Austin. They also expect the monthly payment on their adjustable-rate mortgage to go up $200 in October.
Ms. Suarez, who grew up in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, says she is not as surprised because she remembers home prices falling after the oil bust in the late 1980s. “Growing up in Texas, real estate has never been a windfall,” she said. “For me, I always just wanted to break even.”
Housing prices have previously declined for long stretches in various regions. Most recently, prices fell in California and in the Northeast during the recession of the early 1990s.
The current slump is different from that one, though, in both depth and breadth. In fact, the national median price rose only slightly faster than inflation from 1950 to the mid-1990s.
But as interest rates fell and lending standards became looser, prices started rising rapidly in the late 1990s, even in places like Chicago, which had rarely seen a real estate boom. The result was a “euphoric popular delusion” that real estate was a can’t-miss investment, said Edward W. Gjertsen II, president of the Financial Planners Association of Illinois. “That’s just human nature.”
Many families are clearly richer because of the boom. In the Old Town neighborhood of Chicago, the town house that Ian R. Perschke, a technology consultant, and Jennifer Worstell, a lawyer, bought in late 2004 has appreciated more than 30 percent, they estimated. The gain was big enough to allow them to take out a larger mortgage and renovate two rental units in the house. But Mr. Perschke said he understood that he was “not going to see that appreciation over the next three years.”
Prices in Chicago peaked in September 2006 and have since dipped 1.7 percent, according to the Case-Shiller home-price index, which is tabulated by MacroMarkets, a research firm.
For all the attention that the uninterrupted growth in national house prices received, some economists argue that it was misplaced. The Case-Shiller index, which many experts consider more accurate than the government measure, did show a drop in prices in the early 1990s. (Unlike the government’s measure, it includes mortgages of more than $417,000, which are not held by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.)
After adjusting for inflation — the most meaningful way to look at any price, economists say — even the government’s index fell in the early 1990s.
Dean Baker, an economist in Washington who has been arguing for the last five years that houses were overvalued, said the idea that house prices could go only up had fed the bubble.
“It was very misleading,” said Mr. Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, a liberal research group. There are a lot of people, he said, who bought “homes at hugely inflated prices who are going to take a hit. You also have a lot of people who borrowed against those inflated prices.”
Perhaps the most prominent housing booster was David Lereah, the chief economist at the National Association of Realtors until April. In 2005, he published a book titled, “Are You Missing the Real Estate Boom?” In 2006, it was updated and rereleased as “Why the Real Estate Boom Will Not Bust.” This year, Mr. Lereah published a new book, “All Real Estate Is Local.”
In an interview, Mr. Lereah, now an executive at Move Inc., which operates a real estate Web site, acknowledged he had gotten it wrong, saying he did not fully realize how loose lending standards had become and how quickly they would tighten up again this summer. But he argued that many of his critics have also been proved wrong, because they were bearish as early as 2002.
“The bears were bears way too early, and the bulls were bulls too late,” he said. “You need to know when you are straying from fundamentals. It’s hard, when you are in the middle of the storm, to know.”
TOKYO, Aug. 13 (AP) - (Kyodo)—The U.S. dollar traded at the lower 118 yen level early Monday in Tokyo, largely unchanged from its level late Friday in New York.
At 9 a.m., the dollar was quoted at 118.32-37 yen, compared with Friday's 5 p.m. quotes of 118.37-47 yen in New York and 118.07-09 yen in Tokyo.
The euro fetched $1.3688-3693 and 161.98-162.03 yen, against late Friday's quotes of $1.3689-3699 and 162.07-17 yen in New York and $1.3686-3688 and 161.60-64 yen in Tokyo.
In New York on Friday, the dollar was sold in early trading and fell to the lower 117 yen level on concern about the U.S. subprime-mortgage market, dealers said.
But it later rose about one yen due to the supply of liquidity from central banks around the world, which led to speculation that the Bank of Japan is unlikely to soon raise interest rates and spurred yen selling.
This idiotic blather about a looming recession is aimed at scaring us.
Central banks the world over are printing money like crazy in an attempt to deceive us into thinking more money is more value.
They can't stop a recession, but they can disguise one.
China threatens 'nuclear option' of dollar sales
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Last Updated: 6:00pm BST 07/08/2007
The Chinese government has begun a concerted campaign of economic threats against the United States, hinting that it may liquidate its vast holding of US treasuries if Washington imposes trade sanctions to force a yuan revaluation.
Two officials at leading Communist Party bodies have given interviews in recent days warning - for the first time - that Beijing may use its $1.33 trillion (£658bn) of foreign reserves as a political weapon to counter pressure from the US Congress. Shifts in Chinese policy are often announced through key think tanks and academies.
Described as China's "nuclear option" in the state media, such action could trigger a dollar crash at a time when the US currency is already breaking down through historic support levels.
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It would also cause a spike in US bond yields, hammering the US housing market and perhaps tipping the economy into recession. It is estimated that China holds over $900bn in a mix of US bonds.
Xia Bin, finance chief at the Development Research Centre (which has cabinet rank), kicked off what now appears to be government policy with a comment last week that Beijing's foreign reserves should be used as a "bargaining chip" in talks with the US.
"Of course, China doesn't want any undesirable phenomenon in the global financial order," he added.
He Fan, an official at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, went even further today, letting it be known that Beijing had the power to set off a dollar collapse if it choose to do so.
"China has accumulated a large sum of US dollars. Such a big sum, of which a considerable portion is in US treasury bonds, contributes a great deal to maintaining the position of the dollar as a reserve currency. Russia, Switzerland, and several other countries have reduced the their dollar holdings.
"China is unlikely to follow suit as long as the yuan's exchange rate is stable against the dollar. The Chinese central bank will be forced to sell dollars once the yuan appreciated dramatically, which might lead to a mass depreciation of the dollar," he told China Daily.
The threats play into the presidential electoral campaign of Hillary Clinton, who has called for restrictive legislation to prevent America being "held hostage to economic decicions being made in Beijing, Shanghai, or Tokyo".
She said foreign control over 44pc of the US national debt had left America acutely vulnerable.
Simon Derrick, a currency strategist at the Bank of New York Mellon, said the comments were a message to the US Senate as Capitol Hill prepares legislation for the Autumn session.
"The words are alarming and unambiguous. This carries a clear political threat and could have very serious consequences at a time when the credit markets are already afraid of contagion from the subprime troubles," he said.
A bill drafted by a group of US senators, and backed by the Senate Finance Committee, calls for trade tariffs against Chinese goods as retaliation for alleged currency manipulation.
The yuan has appreciated 9pc against the dollar over the last two years under a crawling peg but it has failed to halt the rise of China's trade surplus, which reached $26.9bn in June.
Henry Paulson, the US Tresury Secretary, said any such sanctions would undermine American authority and "could trigger a global cycle of protectionist legislation".
Mr Paulson is a China expert from his days as head of Goldman Sachs. He has opted for a softer form of diplomacy, but appeared to win few concession from Beijing on a unscheduled trip to China last week aimed at calming the waters.
Bridge collapse may spur steel, cement demand
More retrofitting projects would help industry hurt by housing downturn
The Associated Press
Updated: 7:31 p.m. CT Aug 3, 2007
WASHINGTON - Cement and steel companies, hard-hit by the housing downturn, could see demand improve the next couple of years in the wake of the deadly collapse of Minnesota’s Interstate 35W bridge.
That doesn’t mean bridge construction contracts will start being handed out even this year although Congress is trying to fast-track federal funding for repairs to Minnesota’s collapsed bridge.
The American Society of Civil Engineers estimates the cost of repairing U.S. bridges rated structurally deficient at more than $188 billion over 20 years.
“Unfortunately, this is a timely event that will push people looking at (the bridge problem) to give us some answers,” said Heather Brown, director and associate professor of the Concrete Industry Management Program at Middle Tennessee State University.
After bridge inspections are completed, it likely would be up to two years before government contracts would be issued, says Ed Sullivan, chief economist at the Portland Cement Association, an industry group based in Skokie, Ill.
“The demand would be ramping up at a time when industry can meet it,” Sullivan said, because companies had already implemented production increase plans for next year and beyond in hopes of a housing rebound.
Now they can look to increased demand for bridge reconstruction.
Mired in a slump since record consumption and spending in 2005, the U.S. cement industry last year embarked on an expansion effort and plans to invest $5.5 billion to increase domestic capacity 20 percent by 2010, Sullivan said.
There were 122.5 million metric tons of cement consumed in 2005, a number expected to drop to 116.5 million this year, before surging to 128.9 million in 2010.
Foreign companies own about 81 percent of U.S. cement capacity, according to the trade group. The three largest providers — France’s Lafarge SA, Holcim Ltd. of Switzerland and Mexico’s Cemex SAB — each control about 13 percent of the U.S. market.
Del Boring, vice president of construction at the American Iron and Steel Institute, whose members include Nucor Corp. and United States Steel Corp., said those companies also would step up to meet demand if bridge repair contracts increased.
The industry produced more than 7 million tons of the steel plate used in bridges last year, and the bridge market usually represents about 5 percent of the yearly total although it has risen since increased federal funding was approved in 2005.
Even if demand from bridge repair and construction doubled, Boring said he is “completely confident on the material side, capacity would not be an issue.”
Charles Bradford, a steel analyst with Bradford Research/Soliel Securities, urged caution on the industry’s ability to keep pace.
The 2005 federal highway bill included hundreds of billions of dollars for bridge repairs but “these projects take forever” and the money is not going as far as people hoped, he said.
In the aftermath of the Minnesota tragedy, approval for public projects is likely to pick up and meeting that demand “would be difficult,” Bradford said.
Not to mention the shortage of qualified contractors nationwide for that kind of work.
“There are not enough people that understand aging concrete and steel structures,” Brown said.
There is a growing cadre of companies that specialize in such work. The International Concrete Repair Institute lists hundreds of such firms and contractors on its Web site.
Meeting demand in the steel industry could also be an issue because the same steel used for bridges is also used in office buildings, and the nonresidential market is booming, Bradford said.
Still, even if that market cools a bit and public bridge projects ramp up, steel companies’ would benefit.
Investors seem optimistic about the industry. Shares of Pittsburgh-based United States Steel, the largest U.S.-based steel producer, have nearly doubled in the last year, closing above $91 apiece Friday compared with $59 a share in August last year. Last month, the company said sales grew by $100 million to $4.2 billion in the second quarter although earnings declined 25 percent.
Yet Bradford said he would be surprised if the tragedy creates a bridge construction boom.
“Within a month, people will forget it,” he said, noting that last month’s steam pipe explosion in New York City and natural gas explosions a few years ago quickly exited the public spotlight.
Renewed concern with domestic infrastructure if done on a large enough scale could easily be the BOOM this economy has been waiting on.
Segregation was tried..
Turned out to be objectionable.
Don't be too sure about that
Well that's the thing.. getting through the BS.
Can't trust our government because they have their power acquisition set as the priority.
Can't trust any other government because they have similar priorities.
Since the major media is controlled by it's respective governments we can't listen to them either.
They are playing chess and we're wearing blinders.
N. Korea is just in it for the money.. They are China's arms store front.. They really don't care as long as they are bringing in money.
Iran will continue to pursue weapons technology as they believe that Israel is intending to wipe out the Islamic world.
They might be right or they might be wrong as it is somewhat hard for us to get a real true look at what's happening with all the fronts utilizing the propaganda war quite effectively.