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Re: CrashOverride post# 672182

Wednesday, 02/14/2024 1:59:08 PM

Wednesday, February 14, 2024 1:59:08 PM

Post# of 693621
No insanity. Over the last two or three years, the company has made unbelievable strides with a JAMA article that showed significantly improved. Survival for a terrible horrible form of cancer that nothing has touched before.

Submitted a 1.7 million in page application for approval in the UK. Currently pending.

Developed all on their own a method of creating the Cellular vaccine efficiently with flask Works

All this positive, major positives, it’s why I hold a large position, which I obtained honestly by buying in the open market. Nothing was given to me, or handed to me like free warrants, or anything like that.

An insider sells a half 1 million shares right before a major positive milestone.

Why? So I look into his background and he’s a financer type. After reading the books liars poker, flash, boys, for blood and money, and the big short, I have realized that these financer types cannot be trusted, and a high percentage of them have major ethical problems.

So then I got thinking about why would a guy sell a half 1 million shares right before a major milestone? And say it’s for tax reasons? Then looked up and saw that he sold the shares at 82 and $.83. I calculated the total money that he received. I subtracted the capital gains tax rate to get the net amount he received.

I then asked the question in my mind why would he need this amount of money for a tax thing? of course I had no idea and have no idea why but then I said what if he needed to cover his taxes that he made by loaning out his shares and receiving interest from the shorts?

I took a yearly average of the percent interest that the brokerages were paying. Usually the brokerage takes half and half is given to the client. I assumed that he had all of his shares doing this and calculated the amount of money he would’ve made which turned out to be about $1 million . Said well how much taxes would be due on $1 million of interest. Not knowing the exact tax rate for his exact situation. I made the assumption that it was probably 33% or something like that could be higher could be lower.

OK that works out to be about exactly the amount of money that he got from selling his NWBO shares.

Call it BS, call me stupid, call me all the names you like to use. But it’s a possibility that that was the tax liability he had.

I’m not saying it’s a certainty

I just like the company to make a statement to say that this did not happen, and that their employees and board members are not allowed to short the stock and are not allowed to loan their shares out to third parties who will short it.

Just like what they’ve asked retail to do.

OK with that I’m a QAnon freak, according to you!
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