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That sounds like attempted extortion to me. Let me ask some federal judges...
The BIXT I-Box, info has been created here. Check it out folks
This is not that type of company. It is not a brick and mortar firm, which in many ways are becoming obsolete. It's product development is spread out in several countries
What matters is the people and their credentials. Experience and genius matters.
https://www.bioxytraninc.com/team
Management Team
David Platt
CEO & Chairman
PhD
Dr. Platt is a world-renowned expert in carbohydrate chemistry who has founded three publicly traded companies, creating nearly $1B for investors. He has raised $150M directly in public markets in the U.S., and has led development of two drug candidates from concept through phase II clinical trials. Prior to BioXyTran Inc. Dr. Platt founded Boston Therapeutics Inc. in 2010 (OTC: BTHE). Between 2001 and 2009, Dr. Platt became a founder of Pro-Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (OTC: PRWP and AMEX: PRW, now NASDAQ: GALT), and served as its chief executive officer and board chairman. In 1995 Dr. Platt founded International Gene Group (NASDAQ: IGGI, GLGS now LPJC); he continued to serve the firm through 2000.
Ola Soderquist
CFO
CPA, CMA, CM&AA
Mr. Soderquist has more than 30 years of senior international entrepreneurial management experience within technology companies. He has served in CFO and other managerial capacities in multiple industry sectors and companies, such as Industrivarden (OMX:INDU), Electrolux (OMX:ELUX), Ericsson (NASDAQ:ERIC), Swedish Match (OMX:SWMA) and SKF AB (OMX:SKF), and most recently in Belden (NYSE: BDC) and Traction (OMX:TRAC). Ola is a multi-lingual senior finance professional poised to work globally and cross-functionally, particularly with complex projects involving business integration, systems implementation, continuous improvement, and process excellence. Ola’s managerial experience portfolio includes; Start-ups, Private, Public, Venture Capital and Private Equity ownership. He obtained a BS and an MS in Accounting from Stockholm School of Economics and an MBA from Babson College – Franklin W. Olin Graduate School of Business.
Dr. Leslie Ajayi
CMO & Medical Advisory Board Chief
MD
Dr. Ajayi brings over 20 years of clinical development experience in academia and industry. He is a fully trained physician leader with international specialty training in internal medicine, cardiovascular medicine, and clinical pharmacology. He received his undergraduate training in Health Sciences and his MD equivalent graduating Magna Cum Lade from Obafemi Awolowo University [OAU] in Nigeria. A few years later he received his PhD in clinical pharmacology from the University of Glasgow. As an academic clinical pharmacologist in Glasgow, UK, he worked with Big Pharma as an investigator for Phase 1 first in man, proof of concept, pharmacokinetics (PK), Pharmacodynamics (PD), PK-PD, and studies in special populations such as the elderly and in pregnancy. He was also involved in all types of designs of randomized controlled clinical trials (double blind, placebo controlled, double dummy, single blind, cross over, parallel group, Latin squares designs). His industry exposure was relegated to big pharma clinical research monitors and clinical research organizations. He worked on notable projects like perindopril and cilazapril (ACEI), and amlodipine. He evaluated the effects of ACEI on Type-2 Diabetes and insulin resistance in hypertensives.
Mike Sheikh
Chief Communication Officier
BS
Mr. Sheikh worked as a Broker and eventually Research Analyst at Dean Witter and National Securities. He is a long-time Biotech Consultant expertise for public or private biotech companies with disruptive technologies. Mr. Sheikh the founder of Falcon Strategic Research. Mike has a BS in Economics and is a US Air Force Academy graduate and pilot.
Board of Directors
David Platt
PHD
CEO & CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD
Dr. Platt is a world-renowned expert in carbohydrate chemistry who has founded four publicly traded companies, creating nearly $1B for investors. He has raised $150M directly in public markets in the U.S. and has led the development of two drug candidates from concept through phase II clinical trials. Prior to BioXyTran Inc. Dr. Platt founded Boston Therapeutics Inc. in 2010 (OTC: BTHE). Between 2001 and 2009, Dr. Platt became a founder of Pro-Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (OTC: PRWP and AMEX: PRW, now NASDAQ: GALT), and served as its chief executive officer and board chairman. In 1995 Dr. Platt founded the International Gene Group (NASDAQ: IGGI, GLGS now LPJC); he continued to serve the firm through 2000.
Anders N. Utter
Director
Financial Expert
Mr. Utter has more than 25 years of finance, accounting and management experience in medical devices, consulting and manufacturing industries in capacities as CFO, Controller and Managing Director. He had progressively increased management experience in the European Nolato Group and later on in the Amplex Group. Mr. Utter has had a broad business exposure with IFRS and GAAP reporting as well as with SOX compliance. He has also worked with M&A evaluations, financing and integration as well as more hands-on manufacturing cost accounting and reporting. He is currently in charge of the finance control at one of General Cable’s entities. Mr. Utter is and has been serving as a director on boards in both profit as well as non-profit organizations. Mr. Utter holds an MBA from Babson College and a BA from Uppsala University in Sweden.
Alan M. Hoberman
Director
PhD
Alan M. Hoberman, PhD is president and CEO of Argus International, Inc., overseeing a staff of scientists and other professionals who provide consulting services for industry, government agencies, law firms, and other organizations, both in the U.S. and internationally. Between 1991 and 2013 he held a series of positions of increasing responsibility at Charles River Laboratories Preclinical Services (formerly Argus Research Laboratories, Inc.), most recently as Executive Director of Site Operations and Toxicology. He currently works with that organization to design, supervise, and evaluate reproductive and developmental toxicity, neurotoxicity, inhalation, and photobiology studies. Dr. Hoberman holds a PhD in toxicology from Pacific Western University, an MS in interdisciplinary toxicology from the University of Arkansas, and a BS in biology from Drexel University.
Dale H. Conaway
Director
DVM
We are proud to have Dr.Dale H. Conaway as a board member at Bioxytran Inc. From 1998 to 2001, Dr. Conaway served as Manager of the Equine Drug Testing and Animal Disease Surveillance Laboratories for the Michigan Department of Agriculture. From 1994 to 1998, he was Regulatory Affairs Manager for the Michigan Department of Public Health Vaccine Production Division. From May 2001 to February 2009, Dr. Conaway was a director of Pro-Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a public company with shares traded on the NYSE Alternext US. Dr. Conaway received a DVM degree from Tuskegee Institute and an MS degree in pathology from the College of veterinary medicine at Michigan State University.
Advisory Board
Dr. Kevin Mayo
Medical Advisory Board
PHD
Prof. Kevin H Mayo, Ph.D. is a well-known authority in the field of structural biology and structure-based drug design and discovery. He received degrees from Boston University (BA) and the University of Massachusetts (PhD), and was a postdoctoral associate at the Max-Planck Institute for Biochemistry (Alexander von Humboldt Fellow with Nobel Laureate Rudolf Moessbauer) and Yale University (Chemistry). Dr. Mayo is presently Professor of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology & Biophysics, as well as Lab Medicine & Pathology, at the University of Minnesota (UMN), Minneapolis, USA. He is also Director of the High Field Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Center at the UMN. Over the years, Dr. Mayo has consulted with numerous pharmaceutical companies and is co-founder of PepTx, Inc., a startup pharmaceutical company based in Minnesota. He also currently holds Visiting Professorships at Maastricht University (The Netherlands), Ludwigs-Maximillian-University (Munich, Germany), and Northeast Normal University (Changchun, China). Dr. Mayo has published over 250 papers in peer-reviewed scientific journals and is the author of 28 patents.
Dr. Leslie Ajayi
CMO & Medical Advisory Board Chief
MD
Dr. Ajayi brings over 20 years of clinical development experience in academia and industry. He is a fully trained physician leader with international specialty training in internal medicine, cardiovascular medicine, and clinical pharmacology. He received his undergraduate training in Health Sciences and his MD equivalent graduating Magna Cum Lade from Obafemi Awolowo University [OAU] in Nigeria. A few years later he received his PhD in clinical pharmacology from the University of Glasgow. As an academic clinical pharmacologist in Glasgow, UK, he worked with Big Pharma as an investigator for Phase 1 first in man, proof of concept, pharmacokinetics (PK), Pharmacodynamics (PD), PK-PD, and studies in special populations such as the elderly and in pregnancy. He was also involved in all types of designs of randomized controlled clinical trials (double blind, placebo controlled, double dummy, single blind, cross over, parallel group, Latin squares designs). His industry exposure was relegated to big pharma clinical research monitors and clinical research organizations. He worked on notable projects like perindopril and cilazapril (ACEI), and amlodipine. He evaluated the effects of ACEI on Type-2 Diabetes and insulin resistance in hypertensives.
Dr. John Mabayoje
Medical Advisory Board
MD
Dr. Mabayoje is an active practicing Emergency Room doctor and Medical Director who graduated from the University of Ife /OAU in 1980. He has 6 years of residency/ fellowship training in internal medicine, family practice, geriatric medicine, substance abuse, and emergency medicine. He also has 125 hours of sonography training. He is licensed to practice in a number of states and has 44 years’ experience in emergency medicine in the United States and internationally. He has published research work on histochemistry. He has extensive experience with COVID-19 patients treating over 4,800 patients on 2 continents. He is known in circles as an astute diagnostician and innovator looking for ways to getting the best therapeutic advantages for his patients.
Dr. Thomaskutty Alumparambil
Scientific Advisory Board
B.S., C.C.P
Dr. Thomaskutty Alumparambil. B.S., C.C.P has over 30 years of clinical experience that includes heart, lung, and liver transplants. He is an expert on quality control and quality assurance programs, surgical protocols, blood gas analysis and anticoagulation management.
Dr. Alben Sigamani
Scientific Advisory Board
MD
Dr. Alben Sigamani, MD. Dr.Sigamani is currently Professor and Head of Clinical Research, Narayan Health, Bangalore. He has over 17 years of experience in clinical research and in managing multi-center academic and regulatory Randomized Controlled Trials in India. He has several publications to his credit with a citation index (h-index) of 24. Dr. Sigamani is a Medical Professional (MD) in Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics with a Masters Degree in Clinical Trials from the University of London. In 2020, Dr. Sigamani obtained “COVID-19: Tracking The Novel Coronavirus Certificate ” from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
Prof. Avraham Mayevsky
Scientific Advisory Board
PhD
Prof. Avraham Mayevsky is a worldwide authority in the field of minimal invasive monitoring of tissue and organ physiology. Prof. Mayevsky is a professor at the Faculty of Life Sciences, Bar-Ilan University, Israel. He founded Vital Medical Ltd. He served as Head of the Department of Life Sciences and Dean of the Faculty of Natural Sciences at Bar-Ilan University, where he established a center of tissue physiology. He served as Visiting professor at University of Pennsylvania and Johns Hopkins Medical School World-recognized expert in tissue physiology, especially in brain metabolism. He Published over 150 papers and patents. He has published over 170 papers in scientific journals and is the author of five patents. Prof. Mayevsky completed PhD from Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel.
BIXT is a Biotech. BIXT has a Patent covering 60+ virus applications for a non toxic carbohydrate based antivial, that cleared Covid19 in as little as 2 days, with no rebound. Cleared most of a Shingles skin outbreak as a cream.
The recent 10 Million dollars of zero dilution (not a loan, not a debt, no shares used) funding from the HEMEFoundation is for completing the work on the worlds first synthetic HEME Iron oxygen carrier.
https://hemefoundation.org/global-blood-shortage/
Seems to be convinced $BIXT has a massive future saving lives.
https://www.bioxytraninc.com/invest
https://www.bioxytraninc.com/press-releases/bioxytran-announces-preprint-of-shingles-case-study-showing-clearance-using-a-topical-galectin-3-antagonist
https://www.bioxytraninc.com/press-releases/bioxytran-launches-joint-venture-with-the-heme-foundation-for-development-of-universal-oxygen-carrier
https://assets-global.website-files.com/5cd9cf5f4183373f6b248799/63b59e37a80db77c70840b2a_Bioxytran%20Investor%207%20Jan%202022%20(NXPowerLite%20Copy).pdf
https://www.bioxytraninc.com/invest#press-releases
https://www.bioxytraninc.com/invest#presentation
https://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/BIXT/overview
https://www.bioxytraninc.com/resources#SCIENTIFIC-PUBLICATIONS
BIXT recorded presentation from 4 weeks ago.
Not one scintilla of truth in that post as STARZ / $LION have not denied the deal, or done anything to claim it is not true, thus it is true.
If it was not true, LION would have filed a public denial, in a PR, or a lawsuit.
Claims it is not real are lies, and defamatory, and the SEC already nailed one notorious basher / short group with a $20 Million dollar fine
https://www.sec.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2024-89
The tide has turned and the SEC is now going after bashers and shorts. This is just the beginning of the SEC warnings:
https://www.sec.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2024-89
$20 million dollars for short sellers bashing stocks, is huge.
If STARZ or LionsGate had any problem with the $SAPX 8K SEC filing earlier this year, the world would know about it already. The silence confirms it is real.
Attacking a company, SAPX that has a deal with STARZ/$LION with defamatory posts, is super risky for the posters. Defamation suits are very costly.
Not one scintilla of truth in that post. Except this:
https://www.accesswire.com/851909/seven-arts-entertainment-inc-announces-multi-million-dollar-revenue-merger-and-up-list-developments
The Lionsgate "deal" is with SAPX, confirmed by the 8K
Too funny to see hank got tanked's prior posts now proven to be dead wrong, and yet Hank comes back for more, with total nonsense.
$BABLD
http://newcapitallink.co.uk/the-rise-of-crypto-ipos/
LOLOLOL, no one is fooled
I can put one attorney in a room, ask one question and get 50 opinions. None of which are facts, and most of which are wrong.
Might want to Stop advertising for that 2 bit(?) OTC stock law firm? Did you get their permission to use their paper in the defamatory posts here?
The legal word is not libel, it is "Defamation". The only threats posted have been yours, it seems?
Defamation can be pursued and the defended bankrupted with, wait for it, LOL, attorney costs, all the way to the Supreme court.
It is not the old outdated, financials etc you posted that are a problem, it is the defamatory spin you added, claiming it was fact? That is how Andrey Left got nailed by the SEC for $20 Million dollars in recent weeks. Ouch....
I found some interesting advice in a meme:
Oh, and by the way, no one is pumping a stock that is in EM market. That is the silliest nonsense I ever heard.
Unless you are short, and freaking out? Is that it? You are trying to manipulate us to get us longs to sell?
That makes perfect sense
Why the IFUS secret to breaking down, De-Polmerizing Lignin in Bagasse, that has enabled the invention of a game changer cattle feed, and mulch, IFUS SGP+(tm) is such a big deal for the world economy, climate change caused droughts, floods, and souring food costs:
https://www.biooekonomie-bw.de/en/articles/dossiers/lignin-a-natural-resource-with-huge-potential
Lignin – a natural resource with huge potential
Petroleum is the lifeblood of the chemical industry. It is the raw material for basic chemicals and is used to produce a tremendous wealth of products. Growing demand and dwindling resources mean that the chemical industry is increasingly focusing on renewable resources. Lignin is a wood component that is proving to be a particularly promising resource. It is currently almost exclusively used for generating energy, although it could also be used for many other purposes. In Baden-Württemberg, a research consortium is specifically focused on exploring the potential of this wood component.
Wood processing plant in the city of Buchenbach. © Juliette Irmer
Lignocellulose (Latin lignum = wood) gives plants shape and stability. Lignocellulose biopolymers strengthen the cell wall of plants and consist of three main components: cellulose and hemicellulose form a framework in which lignin is incorporated as a kind of connector, thus solidifying the cell wall. Cell wall lignification makes plants resistant to wind and pests.
In contrast to fossil petroleum, lignocelluloses derived from wood, straw or Miscanthus are renewable raw materials, they can be grown on fields and in forests and are climate neutral. Moreover, the amount of carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere by burning wood and woody materials does not exceed that stored by the trees as they grow. But are lignocelluloses a serious alternative to petroleum?
From petroleum refineries to biorefineries
The chemical industry entirely depends on carbon compounds for creating products such as paints, adhesives, artificial fibres, fertilisers, pesticides and, above all, plastics. In Germany, petroleum, natural gas and coal account for roughly 87 percent of all carbon compounds used for these purposes.
However, carbon also occurs in plants. During photosynthesis, plants bind atmospheric carbon dioxide and use it to produce energy-rich molecules, primarily sugar compounds. The chemical industry already uses renewable resources to a limited extent (13 percent), mainly vegetable oil, starch, natural rubber and cellulose.
The objective is to increase this percentage in the future. "Our long-term goal is to establish biorefineries in which renewable raw materials can be used in their entirety in an optimised value chain,” says Dr.-Ing. Daniel Forchheim from the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and coordinator of the Lignocellulose consortium in Baden-Württemberg. The consortium is currently working on 19 projects that study the entire flow of material from field to product. The major research areas are the cultivation of the raw material, i.e. the selection and breeding of lignocellulose-producing plants, the testing of novel extraction methods and biotechnological and chemical synthesis strategies for the development of biobased products.
Lignin – the new petroleum?
Phenylpropane building blocks of lignin coumaryl alcohol (1), coniferyl alcohol (2) and sinapyl alcohol (3). Source: Yikrazuul / Wikimedia Commons | public domain / https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Monolignols_general.svg?uselang=de
Lignin, which represents up to 30 percent of the lignocellulose biomass, is an unexploited treasure – at least from a chemical point of view. The resinous substance consists of different aromatic basic building blocks, so-called phenylpropanoids, which are extremely useful. Aromatic compounds are normally extracted from petroleum and used to produce plastics, drugs and paints. The potential of lignin is therefore quite high: besides cellulose and chitin, lignin is the most abundant polymer in nature - and the only one that contains such a large number of aromatic compounds.
Every year, approximately 50 million tonnes of lignin are produced worldwide as by-products of the paper industry. Lignin is usually extracted from wood pulp using a sulphate process during which debarked wood chips, straw or crushed corn stalks are boiled for several hours in large pressure vessels with sodium hydroxide in order to remove the lignin from fibruous cellulose. Lignin is a by-product of this process and accumulates in the form of black liquor. The material potential of lignin remains largely unused: 98 percent of lignin is burned.
However, lignin can also be produced from straw or Miscanthus, a giant grass with a particularly promising potential. Miscanthus x giganteus grows on nutrient-poor soils, achieves high yields and defies many stress factors. It is also used as the pilot plant in a subproject being carried out by researchers from the Center for Organismal Studies at the University of Heidelberg. “We are studying the influence of environmental factors on an important metabolic pathway in plants called the phenylpropanoid pathway,” says Linn Voß from the Center. The phenylpropanoid pathway starts with the amino acid phenylalanine. Plants have a certain pool of this compound, which they use to synthesise compounds that provide e.g. protection against herbivores and pathogens as well as lignin. Plants are able to alter the quantity of phenylpropanoids in response to changing environmental conditions. During dry conditions or when they are infected with insects, plants produce more defence substances and less lignin. “Miscanthus is very robust and seems to be very efficient in its use of phenylalanine. We now want to understand how plants are able to alter these quantities,” says Voß.
The different lignin building blocks form a network. © KIT-IKFT, Marcus Breunig
In addition to basic research, the research consortium is also looking at developing new conversion methods. A distinction needs to be made between the separation of lignocellulose into its three main constituents and subsequent processes which break down cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin into their basic building blocks. This is particularly difficult for lignin as the phenylpropanoid building blocks coniferyl, cumaryl and sinapyl alcohol are linked together in different ratios and form a dense, three-dimensional network that is difficult to break up chemically. Due to its complex structure, breaking down lignin requires high temperatures (up to 500 degrees Celsius) and high pressure (up to 200 bar). This is the reason why researchers are specifically focused on developing methods that do less damage to the cellulose and hemicellulose and are more economical.
Reaching the goal with bacteria and fungi
The researchers are using nature as a model: white rot fungi break down lignin using an enzyme cocktail. But this is a very slow process. The fungi break down lignin mainly with the aid of laccase and peroxidase enzymes. However, the results obtained in the laboratory are not always satisfactory. “The enzymatic processes do both, synthesise new molecules and break down others. The enzymes break down lignin into its building blocks, but also assemble them again,” says Dr. Susanne Zibek from the Fraunhofer Institute for Interfacial Engineering and Biotechnology in Stuttgart. Another approach which aims to break down lignin directly with the aid of bacteria and fungi might be more promising. “Bacteria and fungi possess the pathways we have in mind,” says Dominik Rais from the Institute of Interfacial Engineering and Plasma Technology at the University of Stuttgart. The researchers use genetic engineering methods to make the bacteria express more enzymes of interest or turn off unwanted ones. The ultimate goal is to produce specific lignin building blocks only. However, the method is still in an early phase of development.
Chemists from the Max Planck Institute for Coal Research in Mülheim an der Ruhr have developed a process that aims to make lignin easier to use. Thanks to two catalysts and three interconnected chemical reactions, lignin can be broken down at 150 degrees and less than 40 bar. Above all, the process does not produce the wild mixture of aromatic compounds which is usually obtained during the thermochemical separation of lignin and that is difficult to separate, but a more uniform group of aromatic carbon compounds that are easier to isolate.
The first applications that use lignin as a material already exist: a company called TECNARO from the Baden-Württemberg city of Ilsfeld blends lignin with other natural fibres such as flax or hemp to produce a fibre composite called ARBOFORM® (Arbor, Latin = tree) that can be shaped at elevated temperatures. This composite is also called liquid wood because it can be turned into any shape whatsoever, including steering wheel segments, mobile phone housings or musical instruments such as flutes. In addition, lignin can be used to produce artificial vanillin on the industrial scale. Approximately three kilograms of vanillin can be produced from around one tonne of wood.
Cellulose and hemicellulose building blocks can also be used as materials. A group of researchers at the University of Hohenheim uses genetically modified yeast to produce ethanol from agricultural waste such as straw. The Swiss company Clariant has also managed to do this. Their demonstration plant in the city of Straubing can produce up to 1,000 tonnes of ethanol per year. This cellulosic ethanol is already used in cleaning agents.
Biomass is not unlimited
Organisation of the Lignocellulose consortium. © KIT
Lignin has huge application potential. However, the quantity of lignin that will be used in the chemical industry in the future depends on many factors: on the one hand, it depends on the progress of crude oil prices, and on the other on progress in research. The research consortium is also dealing with potential ecological constraints associated with the use of lignin: how intensively can lignocellulose be used for extracting lignin before it has a severe environmental impact? ”One group of researchers is focusing on the question as to how much dead wood there needs to be in a forest. "This is an important aspect to investigate as lignin is an important soil former,” says Forchheim.
Another subproject is investigating the regional availability and sustainable use of lignocellulose: "Wood is a resource that is produced sustainably and it is not in direct competition with food production. So there is no ethical problem. However, lignocellulose is already being used intensively and there is little room for expansion,” says Dr. Marcus Lingenfelder, a forestry researcher from the University of Freiburg. Making wood-derived lignocellulose available in a sustainable way for the bioeconomy would require replacing the use of wood for energy production in the long term with other renewable energy sources such as sunlight, wind and water. “This would be quite a sensible strategy as it is much more area efficient than biomass combustion. In addition, the incorporation of lignocellulose into durable products would trap more atmospheric CO2 for longer,” says Lingenfelder.
Using the fast-growing Miscanthus grass is not without its difficulties either. Although Miscanthus is a non-food biomass, its cultivation nevertheless competes with the production of food and feed as agricultural land is not only limited in Germany but also elsewhere. Therefore lignin produced from agricultural residues or as a by-product in the paper industry and is currently mainly burnt seems a rather good alternative. The added value that will generate higher revenues when lignin is used for more than just energy generation will expand the range of possibilities for green products. Although lignocellulose will probably not replace petroleum in the near future, it is likely to complement it.
Indeed, and the $IFUS CEO recently confirmed they have a 100% customer retention rate on the cattle feed.
The Organic Mulch Fertilizer IFUS recently announced could be an even bigger deal than the cattle feed. I know a number of IFUS rancher, farmer, shareholders already testing the Mulch for themselves. Many real IFUS shareholders have raised their target share prices to $200/share. $IFUS Shorts are screwed.
Just imagine millions of square miles of world deserts converted to farms, ranches and forests, started with super sized dry bulk tanker loads of IFUS SGP+(tm) mulch as the key reclaiming the world deserts. The Saudis will be all over using this.
Remember folks, IFUS, at full capacity, can make enough profit in one day, to fund adding a second production line at the existing plant.
All your fave company did was waste 9 years and 58 Million dollars of investors money.
Read it below. If you can not read and comprehend it, hire a real expert, and have them dumb it down for you oh brainless no one is fooled.....moron,
Here is the scientific study proving you were fooled by the MooTral Pump-nonsense
You were 100% fooled (or lied?), I will go with fooled, since you love to claim no one is fooled, LMAO:
https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=174473080
IFUS SGP+(tm) works and feeds cattle and eliminates flies and odor and air and water pollution, and reduces methane emissions and.... Cuts feed costs up 85%
Yep, and that is peanuts if they succeed making the Ebay of NFTs
So, to be clear, are you slandering Lions Gate and their lawyers now, because an obvious vendetta? Or am I replying to a paid bash post? Neither is very smart.
Is your life ambition to replace Chittron Research with your slander posts?
https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=andrew+left
https://www.justice.gov/criminal/criminal-vns/case/united-states-v-andrew-left
Some things are better Left alone, LOL
https://www.sec.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2024-89
SEC Charges Andrew Left and Citron Capital for $20 Million Fraud Scheme
Boca Raton short seller used ‘bait-and-switch’ tactics to mislead investors
For Immediate Release
2024-89
Washington D.C., July 26, 2024 —
The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced charges against activist short seller Andrew Left and his firm, Citron Capital LLC, for engaging in a $20 million multi-year scheme to defraud followers by publishing false and misleading statements regarding his supposed stock trading recommendations.
The SEC’s complaint alleges that Left, who resides in Boca Raton, Fl., used his Citron Research website and related social media platforms on at least 26 occasions to publicly recommend taking long or short positions in 23 companies and held out the positions as consistent with his own and Citron Capital’s positions. The complaint alleges that following Left’s recommendations, the price of the target stocks moved more than 12 percent on average. According to the SEC’s complaint, once the recommendations were issued and the stocks moved, Left and Citron Capital quickly reversed their positions to capitalize on the stock price movements. As a consequence, Left bought back stock immediately after telling his readers to sell, and he sold stock immediately after telling his readers to buy.
“Andrew Left took advantage of his readers. He built their trust and induced them to trade on false pretenses so that he could quickly reverse direction and profit from the price moves following his reports,” said Kate Zoladz, Director of the SEC’s Los Angeles Regional Office. “We uncovered these alleged bait-and-switch tactics, which netted Left and his firm $20 million in ill-gotten profits, and we intend to hold Left and his firm accountable for their actions.”
The complaint alleges that Left and Citron Capital made several false and misleading statements in connection with the scheme. For example, it alleges that defendants told the market that they would stay long on a target stock until the price hit $65 when, in fact, they immediately began selling the stock at $28. It further alleges that they falsely represented to the market that Citron Research was an independent research outlet that had never received compensation from third parties to publish information about target companies when, in fact, the defendants had entered into compensation arrangements with hedge funds.
The SEC’s complaint, filed in the United States District Court for the Central District of California, charges Left and Citron Capital with violating antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws. Among other remedies, the complaint seeks disgorgement, prejudgment interest, and civil monetary penalties against Left and Citron and conduct-based injunctions, an officer-and-director bar, and a penny stock bar against Left.
In a parallel action, the Fraud Section of the Department of Justice and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California today announced charges against Left.
The SEC previously settled public administrative charges against Dallas-based registered investment adviser Anson Funds Management LP and Toronto-based exempt reporting adviser Anson Advisors Inc. for conduct involving their relationship with Left and other short publishers.
The SEC reminds investors to be skeptical and never make investment decisions based solely on information from social media or other unverified platforms.
The SEC’s investigation, which is ongoing, is being conducted by Sarah Nilson and Wendy Pearson and supervised by Finola Manvelian. Carina Chambarry and Michael Barnes in the SEC's Division of Economic and Risk Analysis and Darren Boerner in the Division of Enforcement’s Market Abuse Unit provided assistance. The litigation will be led by Stephen Kam and Ruth Pinkel and supervised by Doug Miller. The SEC appreciates the assistance of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.
Is your life ambition to replace Chittron Research with your slander posts?
https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=andrew+left
https://www.justice.gov/criminal/criminal-vns/case/united-states-v-andrew-left
Some things are better Left alone, LOL
https://www.sec.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2024-89
SEC Charges Andrew Left and Citron Capital for $20 Million Fraud Scheme
Boca Raton short seller used ‘bait-and-switch’ tactics to mislead investors
For Immediate Release
2024-89
Washington D.C., July 26, 2024 —
The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced charges against activist short seller Andrew Left and his firm, Citron Capital LLC, for engaging in a $20 million multi-year scheme to defraud followers by publishing false and misleading statements regarding his supposed stock trading recommendations.
The SEC’s complaint alleges that Left, who resides in Boca Raton, Fl., used his Citron Research website and related social media platforms on at least 26 occasions to publicly recommend taking long or short positions in 23 companies and held out the positions as consistent with his own and Citron Capital’s positions. The complaint alleges that following Left’s recommendations, the price of the target stocks moved more than 12 percent on average. According to the SEC’s complaint, once the recommendations were issued and the stocks moved, Left and Citron Capital quickly reversed their positions to capitalize on the stock price movements. As a consequence, Left bought back stock immediately after telling his readers to sell, and he sold stock immediately after telling his readers to buy.
“Andrew Left took advantage of his readers. He built their trust and induced them to trade on false pretenses so that he could quickly reverse direction and profit from the price moves following his reports,” said Kate Zoladz, Director of the SEC’s Los Angeles Regional Office. “We uncovered these alleged bait-and-switch tactics, which netted Left and his firm $20 million in ill-gotten profits, and we intend to hold Left and his firm accountable for their actions.”
The complaint alleges that Left and Citron Capital made several false and misleading statements in connection with the scheme. For example, it alleges that defendants told the market that they would stay long on a target stock until the price hit $65 when, in fact, they immediately began selling the stock at $28. It further alleges that they falsely represented to the market that Citron Research was an independent research outlet that had never received compensation from third parties to publish information about target companies when, in fact, the defendants had entered into compensation arrangements with hedge funds.
The SEC’s complaint, filed in the United States District Court for the Central District of California, charges Left and Citron Capital with violating antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws. Among other remedies, the complaint seeks disgorgement, prejudgment interest, and civil monetary penalties against Left and Citron and conduct-based injunctions, an officer-and-director bar, and a penny stock bar against Left.
In a parallel action, the Fraud Section of the Department of Justice and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California today announced charges against Left.
The SEC previously settled public administrative charges against Dallas-based registered investment adviser Anson Funds Management LP and Toronto-based exempt reporting adviser Anson Advisors Inc. for conduct involving their relationship with Left and other short publishers.
The SEC reminds investors to be skeptical and never make investment decisions based solely on information from social media or other unverified platforms.
The SEC’s investigation, which is ongoing, is being conducted by Sarah Nilson and Wendy Pearson and supervised by Finola Manvelian. Carina Chambarry and Michael Barnes in the SEC's Division of Economic and Risk Analysis and Darren Boerner in the Division of Enforcement’s Market Abuse Unit provided assistance. The litigation will be led by Stephen Kam and Ruth Pinkel and supervised by Doug Miller. The SEC appreciates the assistance of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.
You are right Peachman, no one should rely on a butter knife for financial stock information or science and engineering and nutrition information in the manufacturing and agricultural worlds.
IFUS is not about uber-butterknifes and lies-a-lot-bashers. No other OTC or other stock has what IFUS has including:
Impact Fusion International Inc. PK:OTC IFUS
Napoleonville, LA August 7, 2024
The Company is pleased to introduce the members of the scientific team from the
Southern University Agricultural Research and Extension Center (SUAREC) who are
currently conducting research studies with the support of Louisiana Agricultural
Commissioner, The Honorable Dr. Michael Strain and under the direction of LA HCR42
(2024) on Sugarcane Bagasse Utilization:
Dr. Clyde “Pat” Bagley, Interim Associate Vice Chancellor of Research and Director of
Beef Cattle Research Center, Southern University Baton Rouge LA. Dr. Bagley is highly
recognized and published on Bovine Herd performance. He is personally involved in
conducting Bovine Ration Analysis and Bovine Performance Studies on SGP+™ and
leads the team of researchers.
Dr. Devaiah Kambiranda, Research Associate Professor focuses on Biotechnology,
Molecular Biology and Agricultural Plant Science. He is presently applying SGP+(AG)™
as a mulch, fertilizer, and natural insecticide to hemp plantings as well as studies on
application to viticulture.
Dr. Janana Snowden, Director of Medicinal Plant Institute, Associate Professor focuses
on Agricultural Biotechnology, specifically application of SGP+(AG)™ to hemp plantings
in cooperation with Dr. Kambiranda.
Dr. Marlin Ford, is an Urban Agricultural Specialist at SUAREC. He has an extensive
background in research and outreach programs related to urban agricultural practices.
Dr. Ford holds several degrees and is a former L.S.U. football player. Dr. Ford is
assisting Dr. Bagley in securing funding for all research efforts.
Securing Funding for all research efforts is good for everyone Butter knife..Everyone but you
Dr. Mallory Tate DVM is involved in IACUC consulting, Animal Biocontainment,
Laboratory Animal Medicine, Veterinary Surgery and Medicine, and Nonhuman primate
medicine and surgery, as well as a practicing veterinarian. Dr. Tate is involved in the
application of SGP+™ to bovine herd health. He is also exploring application of SGP+™
to other poly-gastric animals as well as mono-gastric animals.
Also, Dr. Tate is involved with the testing of Nutri-Mastic™ for increased efficiency and
effectiveness of bovine I.V.F. as well as the impacts of SGP+™ on the natural
estrogenic effects on bovine heifers for progeny effectiveness and bovine steers for
enhanced marbleization meat quality.
As we understand it, the SUAREC Team is performing a series of lignin and forage
analyses as well as other established methods to prove that IFUS has in fact unlocked
the mystery of lignin degradation and depolymerization. The evaluation is focusing on
SGP+™ becoming an actual hay replacement.
DATA showing SGP+ becoming a replacement for hay is good for IFUS shareholders butter knife
In addition, studies are being conducted to determine the efficacy of SGP+AG™ by Dr.
Devaiah Kambiranda which have shown rapid growth in plants as compared to a
national brand fertilizer and untreated bagasse.
“We have asked Dr. Bagley, who is coordinating all of the studies being conducted by
the scientists at SUAREC, to look at the efficacy of the use of SGP+AG™, SGP+OC™,
in addition to SGP+™. As per our experience the scientists will take note of herd
scoring, the lack of flies, the quality of the manure pats, the production of healthy bug
free fruits and vegetables as well as thriving plants, shrubs and trees.”
Furthermore, Dr. Bagley has reached out to scientists with specific expertise at other
major universities and government research and development centers. Scientists at
Oak Ridge National Laboratories have indicated a keen interest in Dr. Bagley’s
Sugarcane Bagasse Utilization Project.
Oak Ridge National Laboratories provide better due diligence than paid bashers
Dr. Bagley has recently been quoted as saying if IFUS has in fact discovered how to
naturally unlock lignin, the company has discovered the “Holy Grail” of bovine nutrition
estrogenic effects on bovine heifers for progeny effectiveness and bovine steers for
enhanced marbleization meat quality.
As the SUAREC Team is following direction provided by the Louisiana Legislature per
LA HCR-42,(2024), Dr. Kambiranda recently shared the results of a preliminary test of
planting hemp seeds in soil covered with bagasse, in soil covered with SGP+™AG and
in soil covered with a national brand fertilizer. The results within 5 days were noticeable.
In my opinion,IFUS new and experienced Shareholders are better off relying on future independent scientific members of the research team than making a decision based on paid bashers
All folks need to do, to get IFUS is order a bottle of Intact Digest and try it, see how huge the health benefits are. I have used it daily for 11 years now.
Nothing else even close to it on the market.
hhtps://www.impactfusionbrands.com
IFUS STRONG
What is the market cap of the float now at $10/share? ( a dime before the R/S)
$710,000?
Chicken feed
The high in 2021 was a mid day high of .24/share IIRC, or $24/share now.
No one has shares to buy or sell, until brokers get our new BABL R/S shares back from the TA. It takes days, sometimes a week, depending on the broker.
Fidelity is always fastest.
I was right, and the bashers , bottom feeders screaming the sky is falling were wrong again. BABL was able to get the name change done and move on.
One stock I married in 2020, went from a shell to a billion dollar market cap, with 5 times the float we will have with BABL when we get our shares back.
I will leave this meme for the ex-bashers
It fits the BS they posted, but I loved buying the cheap shares they sold short.
— Annie (@AnnieForTruth) August 15, 2024
Its true. I know it is true.
$IFUS : Ever seen retail OTC stock shareholders invest cash loans in non convertible debt, at no interest, in a penny stock, to avoid printing more company shares they own a lot of?
Well check out $IFUS folks. Never seen it before now. IFUS shareholders did it, to expand the equipment capacity.
Also the last financials showed the gross profit margin this year rose to 83% already, and the plant is only running at .03% of capacity
as the market wakes up to the fact that IFUS SGP+ can save cattle owners up 85% on cattle feed costs, and shorten the time needed for beef cattle to reach full weight, by 1/3 or more.
$IFUS : Ever seen retail OTC stock shareholders invest cash loans in non convertible debt, at no interest, in a penny stock, to avoid printing more company shares they own a lot of?
Well check out $IFUS folks. Never seen it before now. IFUS shareholders did it, to expand the equipment capacity.
Also the last financials showed the gross profit margin this year rose to 83% already, and the plant is only running at .03% of capacity
as the market wakes up to the fact that IFUS SGP+ can save cattle owners up 85% on cattle feed costs, and shorten the time needed for beef cattle to reach full weight, by 1/3 or more.
A lot of lies were posted here claiming IFUS was lying about this last year:
Read the year end summary from IFUS
https://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/IFUS/news/Impact-Fusion-Provides-Year-End-Update?id=417068
"September 30, 2023 marked our official year end and as of that date we have accomplished a great deal. As article after article was published about the conditions in many states that have been severely affected by the drought that ravished many of the states in the south of the country including but not limited to Texas, Mississippi. Louisiana, Alabama, Oklahoma and New Mexico we have reached out to and met with government officials, both state and federal, to educate them on the availability of SGP+™. We are waiting confirmation of meetings with local and federal senators, governors and Lt. Governors."
IFUS and IFUS shareholders told the truth and the recent Federal, State and University work and funding IFUS PR'd recently, and the Unanimous approval and release of funding, is proof the bashers lied, and proof that IFUS was not lying.
Liars lie.
Basher Bash.
IFUS strong
Folks, meet one of the not so smart front boys for the hedge fund shorts getting worried that my posts here might rally $SAPX
Dig back a year or more back and I said here that $RVVTF could and might go after this application, because Bucci had this potential based on what was already known, and what do you know, there it is.
Great post:
They were CDOs not CDS. Collateralized Debt Obligations. Lehman's Brothers invented them. They had a 10X leverage and they bankrupted the largest insurance firm in the world, AIG in the default, because the banks also added 10X leverage, using them as assets to print and loan out 10x more money than the assets are listed as being worth. Because they packaged high risk loans with AA/AAA rated loans, there was no way to value the CDO's the banks held, once the market figured it out.
It was the MBOs fault, it was 100% Lehman's brothers and Congress, and the US Government, top to bottom, asleep at the wheel trusting the market. Just like in 1929. You are right, it was not Fannie Mae's fault.
Only a moron and fool would makes those claims. $IFUS is the only one, the one with a multi problem solving solution to all the problems that does not create new problems (except for the shorts as they are screwed, no matter how many worthless bash-hers they hire)
The #US #DOD and #CIA and #USDA and #Cargill are very concerned about global food insecurity, and what it leads to, Mass migrations, unstable governments, regional wars which can all lead to WWII.
They are not fooled by the BS a bash-her on liars hub posts to try and get a bid fill.
https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/document/cia-rdp88-01315r000400480012-6
"Global food demand will increase by more than 50 percent in 2050, but due to climate change, agriculture yields of major crops could decrease over that same period. This dangerous combination could lead to price spikes, food insecurity, social unrest, political tensions, and conflict."
IOW, WWIII
https://www.wfp.org/global-hunger-crisis
"Conflict, economic shocks, climate extremes and soaring fertilizer prices are combining to create a food crisis of unprecedented proportions. As many as 309 million people are facing chronic hunger in 71 countries. We have a choice: act now to save lives and invest in solutions that secure food security, stability and peace for all, or see people around the world facing rising hunger. "
"Conflict is still the biggest driver of hunger, with 70 percent of the world's hungry people living in areas afflicted by war?and violence. Events in countries such as Palestine and Ukraine are further proof of how conflict feeds hunger?– forcing people out of their homes, wiping out their sources of income and wrecking countries’ economies.
The climate crisis is one of the leading causes of the steep rise in global hunger.?Climate shocks destroy lives, #crops and livelihoods, and undermine people’s ability to feed themselves.?Hunger will spiral out of control if the world fails to take immediate climate action.
Global fertilizer prices have climbed even faster than food prices. The effects of the war in Ukraine, including higher #natural gas prices, have further disrupted global fertilizer production and exports – reducing supplies, raising prices and threatening to reduce harvests.?High fertilizer prices could turn the current food affordability crisis into a food availability crisis. "
https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP88-01315R000400480012-6.pdf
https://www.dni.gov/files/ODNI/documents/assessments/ATA-2023-Unclassified-Report.pdf
https://www.state.gov/on-the-global-food-crisis/
https://www.defense.gov/News/News-Stories/Article/Article/2709598/defense-official-says-food-insecurity-is-a-readiness-national-security-issue/
https://www.kdll.org/2021-11-25/the-u-s-military-has-a-food-insecurity-problem
https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/field/food-insecurity
Three levels of food-related crises are described in this field: countries facing an exceptional shortfall in aggregate food production/supplies as a result of crop failure, natural disasters, import or distribution disruptions, excessive post-harvest losses, or other supply bottlenecks; countries with widespread lack of access, where a majority of the population is unable to procure food due to very low incomes, very high food prices, or restricted movement within the country; and countries with severe localized food insecurity due to a refugee influx, internally displaced persons, or combinations of crop failure and deep poverty.
Afghanistan
severe localized food insecurity: due to civil conflict, population displacement, and economic slowdown - between November 2021 and March 2022, during the winter lean season, the food insecurity situation was expected to deteriorate and the number of people in "Crisis" or above was likely to increase to 22.8 million, about 35% more than during the same season in 2020/21; following the developments of August 2021 in the country, the international aid flows, an important element of public spending, were halted; the food security situation and agricultural livelihoods in the country is likely to significantly deteriorate in the coming months due to cumulative and cascading impact of multiple shocks, including weather, conflict, economic crisis and the lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic (2022)
Bangladesh
severe localized food insecurity: due to economic constraints and high prices of important food items - food insecurity is expected to remain fragile, given persisting economic constraints; domestic prices of wheat flour and palm oil, important food items, were at high levels in January 2023; the result of elevated international prices of energy, fuel and food, having been transmitted to the domestic markets (2023)
Burkina Faso
severe localized food insecurity: due to civil insecurity in the north and high food prices - according to the latest analysis, about 3.53 million people are projected to face acute food insecurity during the June to August 2023 lean season period; this would be a slight increase compared to the preceding year; food insecurity is primarily underpinned by worsening insecurity in Centre-Nord and Sahel regions, which, as of December 2022 (the latest data available), had displaced about 1.88 million people; high food prices further aggravate conditions of the most vulnerable households (2023)
Burma
severe localized food insecurity: due to conflict, political instability, and economic constraints - the political crisis, following the military takeover on 1 February 2021, resulted in increased tensions and unrest throughout the country; the current uncertain political situation may further compromise the fragile situation of vulnerable households and the Rohingya IDPs residing in the country; armed conflict between the military and non-state armed groups led to population displacements, disrupted agricultural activities and limited access for humanitarian support especially in Rakhine, Chin, Kachin, Kayin, Kayah and Shan states; income losses and a decline in remittances, due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, have affected the food security situation of vulnerable households; domestic prices of Emata rice, the most consumed variety in the country, were at high levels in May 2022, constraining access to a key staple food (2022)
Burundi
widespread lack of access: due to the effects of weather - according to the latest estimates, about 1.2 million people are estimated to be facing Crisis levels of acute food insecurity between June and September 2023, unchanged year on year; the main drivers are the lingering impact of floods in northern areas in late 2022 and high food prices due, in part, to the depreciation of the local currency (2022)
Cameroon
severe localized food insecurity: due to civil insecurity, high food prices, and floods - according to a November 2022 analysis (the latest available), about 3.6 million people were estimated to be acutely food insecure between October and December 2022, as a result of conflict, sociopolitical unrest and high food prices, as well as floods that caused people displacements, damaged standing crops and prevented access to fields (2023)
Central African Republic
exceptional shortfall in aggregate food production/supplies: due to internal conflict and high food prices - according to the latest analysis, issued in November 2022, the number of people in Crisis and above is estimated at 2.7 million between September 2022 and March 2023; this is mainly attributed to the impact of civil insecurity and high food prices; persisting insecurity and population displacements continue to affect agricultural activities and limit farmers’ access to crop growing areas and agricultural inputs; elevated international prices of fuel and fertilizers, largely imported, have reportedly led to a lower use of agricultural inputs in 2022, especially among smallholder farmers, with a negative impact on yields (2023)
Chad
widespread lack of access: due to civil insecurity and shortfall in cereal production - according to the latest analysis, about 1.86 million people are projected to experience acute food insecurity during the June to August 2023 lean season period; this would be an improvement compared to the previous year, mostly due to the higher year-on-year cereal output in 2022 after the below average 2021 production; acute food insecurity is underpinned by persisting insecurity in the Lac and Tibesti regions, which had displaced over 380 000 people by April 2023; furthermore, elevated food prices due to high fuel costs and localized crop losses during the 2022 floods are aggravating food insecurity (2023)
Congo, Democratic Republic of the
widespread lack of access: due to internal conflict in eastern regions and high food prices - according to an October 2022 analysis, 24.5 million people were projected to experience acute food insecurity between January and June 2023; this is due to the intensification of the conflict in the northeastern provinces, which, among other factors, has prevented completion of the harvests and likely will reduce food availability in the months to come (2023)
Congo, Republic of the
severe localized food insecurity: due to floods - above average rainfall amounts since November 2022 triggered flooding in December 2022 and January 2023 in central and northern parts of the country, displacing people; according to damage assessment reports, about 165,000 people have been affected in 23 districts in the departments of Cuvette, Likouala, Plateaux and Sangha (2023)
Djibouti
widespread lack of access: due to unfavorable weather and high food prices - about 250,000 people were estimated to have faced acute food insecurity between March and June 2023, mainly due to the lingering impact of a prolonged and severe drought between late 2020 and early 2023, and high food prices (2023)
Eswatini
severe localized food insecurity: due to higher staple food prices - the price of maize meal, the key food staple, increased in the first five months of 2022 and, as of May 2022, were 3 percent higher on a yearly basis; wheat flour prices were also at record highs in May 2022; this mainly reflects the elevated global prices and the country’s high dependence on imported wheat to satisfy national consumption needs (2022)
Ethiopia
widespread lack of access: due to conflict in Tigray Region, drought conditions in southeastern areas, high food prices - The difficult and worsening food security situation is the result of multiple shocks affecting food availability and access including: the conflict in northern Tigray Region and in adjacent areas of Amhara and Afar regions, which began in November 2020; in Tigray region alone, 5.3 million people are estimated to be severely food insecure; the failure of the March-May 2022 “Gu-Genna” rains in southern pastoral areas of southern Oromiya Region and southern Somali Region, exacerbated drought conditions prevailing since late 2020, causing severe crop and livestock losses; severe macroeconomic challenges including insufficient foreign currency reserves and the continuous depreciation of the national currency, as a result, inflation is at very high levels, with the year-on-year food inflation rate estimated at 35.5 percent in July, one the highest of the last decade; these difficulties are exacerbated by the ripple effects of the Ukraine war, which triggered hikes in international prices of wheat, fuel, and fertilizers (2023)
Guinea
severe localized food insecurity: due to reduced incomes - about 1.22 million people are projected to be in need of food assistance between June and August 2022, primarily due to food access constraints on account of the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic (2022)
Haiti
severe localized food insecurity: due to high food prices, natural disasters, and worsening civil insecurity - about 4.9 million people are estimated to face severe acute food insecurity and were in need of urgent food assistance between March and June 2023; the high levels of food insecurity are the result of sustained economic downturn, reducing domestic food production, elevated food prices, fuel shortage and frequent natural disasters; the situation is exacerbated by worsening insecurity, which has limited access to essential services, including markets, caused population displacements and hampered delivery of humanitarian assistance (2023)
Iraq
severe localized food insecurity: due to civil conflict and economic slowdown - the 2022 Humanitarian Needs Overview identified 2.5 million people in need of humanitarian assistance, of which 960,000 have acute humanitarian needs; while the number of people in need remained similar to the previous year, the severity of those needs increased, largely due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on top of an existing humanitarian crisis, leading to a 35% increase in the number of people in acute need; more than half of these are concentrated in the governorates of Nineveh and Anbar; the number of severely food insecure people is estimated at about 435,000, while 731,000 are vulnerable to food insecurity (2022)
Kenya
exceptional shortfall in aggregate food production/supplies: due to drought conditions - about 4.4 million people were projected to be severely acutely food insecure between October and December 2022 reflecting consecutive poor rainy seasons since late 2020 that affected crop and livestock production; prices of maize are at high levels across the country due to reduced availabilities and high fuel prices inflating production and transportation costs (2023)
Korea, North
widespread lack of access: due to low food consumption levels, poor dietary diversity, and economic downturn - a large portion of the population suffers from low levels of food consumption and very poor dietary diversity; the economic constraints, particularly resulting from the global impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, have increased the population’s vulnerability to food insecurity; the food gap is estimated at about 860,000 mt, equivalent to approximately 2-3 months of food use, if this gap is not adequately covered through commercial imports and/or food aid, households could experience a harsh lean period (2022)
Lebanon
widespread lack of access: due to the ongoing financial and economic crisis - in September 2021, the United Nations estimated that, taking into account multiple factors other than income, such as access to health, education and public utilities, 82% of the population lives in multidimensional poverty in 2021, up from 42% in 2019 (2022)
Lesotho
severe localized food insecurity: due to poor harvests and increased food prices - according to the latest national food security assessment, 22% of the rural population are expected to face acute food insecurity between October 2022 and March 2023, compared to 15% between July and September 2022; the forecasted proportion translates into 320,000 people in rural areas, while an additional 201,000 people in urban areas are foreseen to also need assistance; the foreseen increase of acute food insecurity levels is primarily due to the reduced harvest, high food prices in basic food and non-food commodities and a slow recovery of households’ income reflecting a downturn in economic growth; harvesting of the 2022 main-season summer cereal crops, mostly maize and sorghum, is complete; production of maize, the main cereal staple, is about one-third of the average, while the sorghum output is almost negligible; the poor harvest was primarily due to torrential rainfalls during January and February 2022, which caused localized flooding and resulted in crop losses (2022)
Liberia
severe localized food insecurity: due to high food prices and economic downturn - levels of acute food insecurity are expected to increase in 2023 associated with high food prices due to high international commodity prices and elevated transportation costs, exacerbated by the unfolding effects of the war in Ukraine on international trade and commodity prices; food availability and access are likely to remain limited by high food prices and below-average imports; an expected further slowdown in economic domestic growth in 2023 is likely to compound food insecurity conditions for the most vulnerable households; in the June to August 2023 lean season period, over 531,000 people are projected to face acute food insecurity (2023)
Libya
severe localized food insecurity: due to civil insecurity, economic and political instability, and high food prices - an estimated 800,000 people, 10% of the population, need humanitarian assistance, of which 500,000 require food assistance; the country relies heavily on imports (up to 90%) to cover its cereal consumption requirements (mostly wheat for human consumption and barley for feed); between 2016 and 2020, the country sourced over 30% of its wheat imports from Ukraine, and 20% from the Russian Federation; almost 65% of total maize imports of 650,000 mt, and 50% of total barley imports of 1 million mt originated from Ukraine, making the Libya vulnerable to disruptions in shipments from the Black Sea region (2022)
Madagascar
severe localized food insecurity: due to the effects of extreme weather events and slow economic recovery - according to the latest May 2022 analysis, the prevalence of food insecurity in the southern regions is projected to peak at 2.1 million people by December 2022 until at least March 2023; overall, the number of people requiring humanitarian assistance by the end of 2022 is expected to be about 30 percent higher compared to the peak number in 2021; the poor food security situation is mainly the consequence of six consecutive poor agricultural seasons that culminated in very tight food supplies for rural households and curbed incomes from crop sales; high rates of poverty and increased prices of essential food commodities, combined with a high reliance on market supplies due to low harvests for own consumption, are also contributing to the high rates of food insecurity across the southern regions (2022)
Malawi
widespread lack of access: due to weather extremes and high food prices - the latest analysis indicates that about 3.8 million people (20 percent of the population) are estimated to have faced high levels of acute food insecurity between January and March 2023; this figure is more than double the number in the corresponding months of 2022; high food prices are the key reason for the deterioration in food insecurity, which, in the absence of a substantial increase in incomes, are severely constraining households’ economic access to food; production shortfalls in southern districts in 2022, areas that have the highest prevalence of food insecurity, are a further contributing factor; the impact of Cyclone Freddy (February-March 2023) on southern districts, including crop losses and destruction of infrastructure as well as high food prices, are expected to aggravate food insecurity conditions in 2023 (2023)
Mali
severe localized food insecurity:
due to civil insecurity and high food prices - according to the latest analysis, about 1.26 million people are projected to face acute food insecurity during the June to August 2023 lean season period; in total however, the number of food insecure is lower in 2023 compared to 2022; food insecurity conditions are primarily underpinned by the impact of the conflict in central and northern areas, which has caused the displacement of over 375,000 people, as of April 2023; persistent high food prices affect vulnerable households across the country, but limit in particular the food access of people in conflict-affected areas due to market disruptions and limited access to sources of income and humanitarian assistance
(2023)
Mauritania
widespread lack of access: due to high food prices - according to the latest analysis, nearly 695,000 people are projected to be in need of humanitarian assistance during the June to August 2023 lean season; this would be an improvement compared to the previous year, mostly due to the substantial cereal production increase in 2022; high food prices continue to worsen food security, while flooding in 2022, which affected about 54,000 people, has further aggravated the conditions of vulnerable households (2023)
Mozambique
severe localized food insecurity:
due to shortfall in agricultural production and economic downturn - the number of people in need of food assistance is expected to rise above the 1.86 million estimated in 2021-2022 because of three key factors; firstly, higher year-on-year prices of food and fuel are reducing households’ purchasing power, worsening their economic access to food, particularly for low-income households; secondly, the impact of extreme weather events on agricultural production in central and southern provinces in 2022 is likely to mean that farming households in the affected areas have both low food supplies from their own production and curtailed income-earning opportunities from crop sales, impinging on their food availability and economic access to food; thirdly, there has been an increase in attacks by non-state armed groups in the northern province of Cabo Delgado in 2022
(2022)
Namibia
severe localized food insecurity: due to localized shortfalls in cereal production and rising food prices - cereal production increased in 2022 and this is expected to have a positive impact on food security, however, rising prices of basic foods is likely to limit a more substantial improvement (2022)
Niger
widespread lack of access: due to internal conflict, high food prices, and floods - about 2.87 million people are projected to be acutely food insecure during the June to August 2023 lean season period; this would be an improvement on the situation in 2022, mostly reflecting the sharp upturn in crop yields following the below-average cereal output in 2021; persistent insecurity continues to disrupt livelihoods and has displaced over 360,000 people as of January 2023, mostly in the Diffa, Tahoua and Tillabery regions; high food prices, as well as the floods in 2022 that affected about 327,000 people, are additional factors that have aggravated food insecurity (2023)
Nigeria
widespread lack of access: due to persistent civil conflict in the northern areas, floods, high food prices, and an economic slowdown - about 25.3 million people are projected to face acute food insecurity during the June to August 2023 lean season; this would be a significant deterioration compared to last year, when 19.45 million people were estimated to be acutely food insecure; acute food insecurity is mostly driven by the deterioration of security conditions and conflicts in northern states, which have led to the displacement of about 3.17 million people as of March 2022 (the latest data available) and are constraining farmers’ access to their lands; widespread flooding in 2022, affecting about 4.5 million people across the country, has further compounded conditions, particularly in areas already facing high levels of insecurity; high food prices and the expected slowdown in economic growth in 2023 are additional drivers of acute food insecurity (2023)
Pakistan
severe localized food insecurity: due to population displacements, economic constraints, and high prices of the main food staple - according to the latest analysis, about 4.7 million people, 25% of the population, are estimated to be facing high levels of acute food insecurity, between April and June 2022 in 25 districts analyzed in Balochistan, Sindh and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces; prices of wheat flour, the country’s main staple, were at high levels in most markets in May 2022, constraining access to the staple food (2022)
Senegal
severe localized food insecurity: due to localized shortfalls in cereal production and reduced incomes - according to the latest analysis, about 881,000 people are estimated to be in need of humanitarian assistance between June and August 2022, mostly on account of localized shortfalls in cereal production in 2021 and reduced incomes owing to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic (2022)
Sierra Leone
severe localized food insecurity: due to high food prices and reduced incomes - according to the latest analysis, about 1.18 million people are projected to be in need of humanitarian assistance between the June to August 2023 lean season; acute food insecurity is underpinned by elevated food prices, in part driven by a weak currency, and low purchasing power of vulnerable households (2023)
Somalia
exceptional shortfall in aggregate food production/supplies: due to drought conditions and internal conflict - about 6.5 million people are estimated to face severe acute food insecurity between April and June 2023 as a result of consecutive poor rainy seasons since late 2020 and heightened conflict since early 2021 (2023)
South Sudan
widespread lack of access: due to economic downturn, the lingering effects of floods, and prolonged internal conflict - despite sustained humanitarian assistance, food insecurity still affects large segments of the population, owing to rampant inflation and insufficient food supplies due to stagnant agricultural production, the effects of consecutive years with widespread floods, and the escalation of organized violence at the subnational level since 2020; about 7.76 million people, almost two thirds of the total population, are expected to face severe acute food insecurity in the lean season between April and July 2023 (2023)
Sri Lanka
widespread lack of access: due to serious macroeconomic challenges, significant reduction in 2022 cereal output, and high food prices - severe macroeconomic challenges, mostly reflecting dwindling foreign currency reserves after revenues from merchandise exports, remittances, and from the tourist sector declined dramatically over the last year, have had a negative impact on the country’s capacity to import cereals; the 2022 cereal production sharply declined due to a government ordered reduction in the application of chemical fertilizers; unprecedentedly high food prices are constraining economic access to food for a majority of households
Sudan
severe localized food insecurity: due to conflict, civil insecurity, and soaring food prices - according to the results of the latest analysis, about 11.7 million people (24% of the analyzed population) are estimated to be severely food insecure during June to September 2022; the main drivers are macroeconomic challenges resulting in rampant food and non-food inflation, tight supplies due to a poor 2021 harvest and the escalation of intercommunal violence (2022)
Syria
exceptional shortfall in aggregate food production/supplies: due to civil conflict and economic crisis - the latest available nationwide food security assessment estimated that about 12 million people, 60% of the overall population, were food insecure in 2021, a slight decline from 12.4 million in 2020, but 5 million more than at the end of 2019, mostly due to constrained livelihood opportunities and a rapidly worsening economy (2022)
Tanzania
severe localized food insecurity: due to localized shortfalls in staple food production - about 592,000 people are estimated to be in need of humanitarian assistance between May and September 2022, mainly located in northeastern regions, reflecting crop losses during the October–December “Vuli” 2021 and March–May “Masika” 2022 seasons due to poor rains; high food prices are also constraining households’ economic access to food (2022)
Uganda
severe localized food insecurity: due to weather extremes, civil insecurity, and high food prices- in Karamoja Region, about 518,000 people, 41% of the population, are estimated to be severely food insecure between March and July 2022, as a result of consecutive poor rainy seasons that adversely affected crop and livestock production, frequent episodes of cattle rustling leading to the loss of productive assets, and high food prices (2022)
Ukraine
severe localized food insecurity:
due to conflict - Ukraine continues to be a significant supplier of food commodities for the world; however, according to a 2023 analysis, at least 17.6 million people are estimated to be in need of multi-sectoral humanitarian assistance in 2023 due to the war, including over 11 million in need of food security and livelihood interventions; the harvest of the 2023 winter cereal crops, mostly wheat, is onging and will be concluded by August; as a result of a smaller planted area, the 2023 wheat harvest in areas under government control is estimated at 18.5 million mt, about 8% below the already war-affected 2022 output; despite decreased cereal production, food availability at the national level is reported to be adequate, but access remains a major challenge; the country has already experienced elevated levels of food price inflation in the past, due to the economic impact of the conflict in eastern areas; in addition, rising energy costs, amidst high unemployment rates and limited livelihood opportunities, are reducing households’ purchasing power and driving more people into poverty
(2023)
Venezuela
widespread lack of access: due to severe economic crisis - the national economy, highly dependent on oil production and exports, was forecast to contract in 2021 for the eighth consecutive year; with the persistent negative effects of the COVID-19 pandemic that have compounded the already severe macro-economic crisis, the access to food of the most vulnerable households is expected to deteriorate throughout 2021 and into 2022 due to widespread losses of income-generating activities and soaring food prices (2022)
Yemen
widespread lack of access: due to conflict, poverty, floods, high food and fuel prices - in 2023, a partial analysis in government-controlled areas, where approximately 25 percent of the population in acute food insecurity resides, shows that the situation remains dire; despite some improvements in security, the economic crisis and localized conflicts continue, fueled by persistent political instability, while insufficient external revenues and elevated global commodity prices on imported food limits food security (2023)
Zambia
severe localized food insecurity: due to reduced incomes and localized shortfalls in cereal production - cereal production declined to a below-average level in 2022 and along with the impact of rising food prices, the number of food insecure is foreseen to increase at the end of 2022 to levels above the 1.6 million people estimated in the first quarter of 2022 (2022)
Zimbabwe
widespread lack of access: due to high food prices - based on a government assessment, an estimated 3.8 million people are expected to be in need of humanitarian assistance between January and March 2023; this number is higher than the level estimated in the first quarter of 2022; the downturn in food security conditions is largely on account of poor food access resulting from prevailing high food prices and reduced incomes owing to the effects of an economic downturn; a decline in cereal production in 2022 has also aggravated conditions (2023)
IFUS has a new game changer solution to many of the causes of these problems.
https://youtu.be/fCMfPYMaazM
IFUS UPDATE Louisiana State Legislature Unanimously Passes LA HCR-42 Focusing on Bagasse Utilization
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h8W-KyhKi2g&ab_channel=StocksWizard
https://www.ecowatch.com/biden-doe-decarbonization-heavy-industry.html
https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/news/agricultural-producers-to-conserve-land-through-climate-smart-easements-as-part-of-president
https://www.usda.gov/media/press-releases/2024/04/03/usda-makes-15-billion-available-help-farmers-advance-conservation
https://cig.sc.egov.usda.gov/impact/conservation-innovation-grants-awards-fiscal-year-2023
https://costa.house.gov/sites/evo-subsites/costa.house.gov/files/evo-media-document/one-pager-cows-act.pdf
1.5 Billion dollars aimed right at $IFUS. The Cows Act, and IFUS has the "Holy Grail" tech Per the recent University statements about IFUS SGP+(tm), Google it, for solving the problems that grant funding is aimed at
https://costa.house.gov/sites/evo-subsites/costa.house.gov/files/evo-media-document/one-pager-cows-act.pdf
This is also aimed right at IFUS in the state IFUS is in: https://www.epa.gov/system/files/documents/2024-02/louisiana-5d-02f36401-0-pcap-final-with-appendices.pdf
https://www.farmprogress.com/farm-policy/senators-try-to-rein-in-cattle-emissions
#Cattle #Feed #Floods #Weather #fertilizer #Food #BBQ #Tornado #Farms #Farming #Hurricane #Fires #Disasters #Migration #Hunger #starvation #Water #Crisis
#birdFlu #ranching #Feedlots #Milk #Cheese #Stockstobuy #Investing #Investments #Shorts #stockmarket #News #lignin #FED #health #cows #Bulls #natural #crops #Corn #Ukraine #Japan #Russia #
Just out of curiosity, since you have claimed no one is fooled here, on the IFUS board, why spend 2 years and continue day after day, trying to fool people about IFUS?
I mean we all agree here that no one is fooled, so why waste the time?
We all know IFUS is now going be the next NVIDIA-stock monster on wall street, based on huge profit margins and massive revenue growth.
IFUS Owns the land, the Building, the machinery, the technology that no other company in the world has,
that turns endless massive supplies of free waste Ag-Fiber into money saving,
game changer products that help reduced world wide food costs, make the food we eat healthier, all while reducing climate change #GHG Emission sources,
and IFUS / IFUS Shareholders will soon own the shorts.
You must be lost boy, this is the SAPX board, not the stocks you mentioned in the post I am replying to.
I see dumb as dog shit posts are still showing up here trying to bail out the shorts with lies.
Too funny.
You really have no clue? I see you showed but failed to mention the SEC 15-12G filed in 2015 that de registered SAPX from needing to do SEC reporting.
https://www.accesswire.com/851909/seven-arts-entertainment-inc-announces-multi-million-dollar-revenue-merger-and-up-list-developments
[quote]In addition to this preliminary Agreement, Seven Arts and representatives of Lionsgate have initiated discussions to further develop assets, with a particular focus on the burgeoning Atlanta, GA market, which has been home to Seven Arts since 2021. Currently, Lionsgate is undergoing a restructuring, with an emphasis on its Atlanta studios endeavors, which is expected to generate an additional trading symbol. The Company has agreed to withhold efforts to pursue joint news releases until such time that Lionsgate completes this transition.
LIONSGATE STUDIOS TO LAUNCH AS A SEPARATELY TRADED PUBLIC COMPANY (yahoo.com)
Pursuant to ongoing merger negotiations, which requires the Company to provide audited financial statements, management has determined it is in the best interest of Seven Arts and its shareholders to expedite these expectations and rapidly execute on its previously announced intent to up-list to full SEC reporting. To that end, the Company is actively working with its audit firm.[/quote]
OMG, people invest in OTC stocks? Say it is not so.
LMAO
Floridaboy is one of the good people Kirby. He has just been in SAPX way longer and way deeper than he expected.
He just needs lessons in how much fun basher bashing can be while we wait for D-Day to ruin the shorts and their bash-sh*t days here.
Good news is that we are almost 1/2 way through the 90 days SAPX has to file the annual, that is also needed for the Form 10 filing. Note worthy that the Form 10 requires 2 years of audited annuals, not just the one annual audited.
I have been in stocks that had no filings for years, that came back. One of them made it to a Billion dollar market cap at $10.90 / share as a CE stock in 2021, with no financials, after being dead for a decade.
SAPX is way head of the game than that one was.... SAPX is Pink Current and we know the future is bright. I look forward to buying more way undervalued shares before the Moon ride here.
Now There you go again. Nope, it was a notorious basher, not a pumper that the SEC indicted. I thought you kept up on this stuff?
I hit on the Lumn run, yes, and still long and adding. In fact I made the call on the Lumn rally.
Going long long on it, like I have and am on BABL
You sound upset that $SAPX rallied 20% today. That is odd, for shareholders.
Desperate shorts call for desperate non stop lies and attacks on IFUS. WE know who is behind it, and the SEC and US DOJ is watching.
Setting up and managing, controlling, a site that does all it can to destroy stock prices, thus creating the need for their ad services to promote the stock they are allowing to be bashed with lies, for profit. One of the most notorious of them all was just indicted by the SEC.
"The various types of extortion include protection schemes, blackmail, and ransomware. All three are intimidation tactics used to scare a person into giving up money or valuables."
Nice reversal bounce today here on RVVTF , and no news I could see.
I have never seen so much bash-it-tard attention on a trip zero stock ever.
Its a Riot.
SAPX closed up 20% today With no news. And out performed most major stocks except my LUMN darling pick of the year. $SAPX will make its move and lay waste of shorts just like Lumn did in recent days.
Even the Trolls are loose again. A sure sign they are desperate. That means this stock is a screaming buy folks
That is not correct. OTC is not dead. It just left here because of the abuse.