RE: Boyd - Our Street, by Serfdom
Serfdom touches upon a complex issue,
"I highly doubt Rufus is still in any sort of deal
with Canady if he publicly called him an idiot."
Social engineering, Serfdom, and understanding such
is very complex. My strong habit is to read between
the lines, as you and other intelligent "bashers" do.
When I guest lecture at my university, when I grade
written works by students, one of my objectives is
to determine if the written words are in keeping
with a student's abilities and knowledge level.
Almost always, the answer is "yes." Rarely, though,
I come across papers purchased or ghost written.
Same "reading between the lines" strongly applies
to stock research. Traders _should_ think well
outside the box, should seriously consider all
presented social implications, presented "truths"
from a viewpoint, "Does this comply with social
circumstances?"
Harris calling Canady an "idiot" is a powerful
message to traders. On one hand I view this as
Harris being an idiot for making such a childish
utterance. Other hand, I also acknowledge this
might be a con by both Harris and Canady, which
is of more fanciful interest.
Both a blessing and a curse, being a creative
writer, especially creative fiction, any given
simple sentence I read, also reads an infinite
number of possible stories.
Moving to fiction and readers are to note there
is no truth to this, Canady and Harris are working
together to profit. These two men make a deal which
is never intended to be completed. Major news is
released which hypes up traders. Later, knowing
this deal is fabricated, Canady and Harris create
a "falling out" and the deal is off. Both are off
the hook; valid excuses are created.
During this, Canady and Harris, through a buffered
third party, are trading shares, for great profit.
In time, this third party, after taking his cut,
delivers to both men suitcases stuffed with cash;
no paper trail for any to follow. Well, no paper
trail but enough evidence to be caught by a very
sharp investigator.
Again, no truth to my story.
This is an example of thinking outside the box.
For these CSHD issues, for any stock research, readers
are encouraged to think outside the box, are urged to
develop many possible scenarios, then test each case
for validity, truth and odds of possibly being true.
Doing so, is an important tool to help earn profits
and to avoid losses.
A closing example is my just prior discussion of
felony arrest warrants for Canady. Understanding
the social situation, I know some cops, along with
a prosecutor, presented a case to a judge who, in
turn, decided there is sufficient evidence to have
Canady arrested on _felony_ charges. The implications
are very serious, just as serious as when the SEC
alleges securities fraud against whomever.
When charges like this are leveled, this is serious.
Law enforcement is rarely wrong, entities such as
state and federal securities regulators, are equally
rarely wrong. Not always right, but almost always
right about charges.
Understanding social engineering, almost all players
in this crazy CSHD deal, almost all are tainted with
negative social issues. This is equally serious.
Purl Gurl