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Re: None

Saturday, 04/06/2019 8:57:12 AM

Saturday, April 06, 2019 8:57:12 AM

Post# of 596
Name Symbol Market Market Name
KERR MINES INC. 7AZ1:FF FF Frankfurt
KERR MINES INC. 7AZ1:TG TG Tradegate
Kerr Mines Inc KERMF OTCQB OTCQB - U.S. Registered
Kerr Mines Inc - Ordinary Shares 0V2X:LN LSEI London Stock Exchange International
Kerr Mines Inc. KER:APH ALPHA Alpha
Kerr Mines Inc. KER:AQL AQL Aequitas - Lit
Kerr Mines Inc. KER:AQN AQN Aequitas - Neo
Kerr Mines Inc. KER:CC TSXC CDN Consolidated
Kerr Mines Inc. KER:PUR PURE Canadian Securities Exchange (PURE)
Kerr Mines Inc. KER:CX2 CX2 Nasdaq CX2
Kerr Mines Inc. KER:CHI CHIX Nasdaq CXC
Kerr Mines Inc. KER:ICX ICX. Instinet Canada Cross
Kerr Mines Inc. KER:LQN LQN Liquidnet Canada
Kerr Mines Inc. KER:LYX LYNX Lynx
Kerr Mines Inc. KER:OMG OMEGA Omega
Kerr Mines Inc. KER:TCM TCM TriAct Canada
Kerr Mines Inc. KER:CA TSX Toronto Stock Exchange

https://www.quotemedia.com/portal/quote?qm_symbol=KER

Well you would not bother listing Kerr Mines on all of these exchanges unless... $$$ imho

https://kerrmines.com/

http://www.sprott.com/

http://www.sprott.com/precious-metals-watch/

http://sprott.com/investment-strategies/physical-bullion-trusts/

On a separate note, “...The best Brexit is still no Brexit
Prime Minister Theresa May's new strategy isn't much better than her old one..”

“...U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May this week stopped trying to get her fellow Tories to back her plan for quitting the European Union, and asked the opposition Labour Party to come to her aid. Could this be that most elusive of Brexit developments: progress?

Not exactly. For many reasons – politics, self-interest, the fundamentally incoherent task at hand – May and Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn are unlikely to hash out a workable agreement about how Britain should exit the EU. If they fail, May says she’ll let Parliament settle the matter by voting on various options, through a yet-to-be-determined process.

It’s hard to imagine a breakthrough there, as well. Lawmakers have spent recent days rejecting just about every theoretical variant of Brexit. May’s plan has been voted down three times since January. Even the least-unpopular alternatives – such as adding a permanent customs union to the political declaration attached to May’s withdrawal agreement – would require a steady cross-party alliance, which on current trends looks implausible.

And the underlying problems haven’t gone away. Although the public voted for Brexit in the abstract, all specific versions of it find little support. That’s because they all would, to varying degrees, reduce growth, harm businesses, diminish Britain’s standing in the world and quite possibly impinge on its sovereignty by binding it to EU rules it will no longer have a say over. As ever in this misadventure, the choices are between bad and worse.

Even so, what should happen now isn’t in doubt: The government should seek a long extension of the Article 50 process that underpins Brexit, and plan for a second referendum – with Remain as an option on the ballot, alongside whatever deal May or her successor manages to devise. Britain’s citizens deserve a chance to decide whether the Brexit on offer bears any resemblance to what they thought they were voting for in 2016, and should be given the opportunity to think again.

Granted, further delay and indecision will be costly. The chaos of the past few years in British politics has already done great harm. Investment has declined for four straight quarters. Confidence is plummeting. Manufacturers have been stockpiling at a record rate, incurring needless expense and limiting future growth. By several estimates, Brexit has already reduced GDP by at least 2 percent. Meanwhile, other public business has all but come to a halt....”

https://www.pressherald.com/2019/04/06/another-view-the-best-brexit-is-still-no-brexit/

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