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Re: ssc post# 364789

Wednesday, 04/16/2025 9:39:55 AM

Wednesday, April 16, 2025 9:39:55 AM

Post# of 365503
Ssc, Badog,

Let’s be very clear about what I said: if someone knows they’re short and is actively denying the possibility of shorting to manipulate investor perception—that’s investor fraud. That’s not a threat. It’s not intimidation. It’s straight from the SEC’s own playbook on misleading statements and material omissions designed to deceive the public.

You can mock it all you want, but nothing in your rebuttal changes the substance of that claim.

Now, neither of you has to admit you’re short. That’s fine. But let’s not pretend that repeating the words “I’m not short” makes it so. Especially when:

The stock remains under caveat emptor despite being DTC eligible and tradable on platforms like SpeedTrader.

No one’s been able to reconcile float math with historical trading volumes.

The International Caveat Emptor was issued after the Shell PSC signing—not before.

Nearly every accusation you lob at me is a deflection from the real issue: who holds the synthetic shares? Where are they?


As for “fraudulent bullish claims” and “$8 predictions,” let me remind you:

I’ve said clearly that I don’t have certainty. I present hypotheses, scenarios, and strategic possibilities based on available data and patterns.

I’ve never sold a share. I’ve never promised others riches. And I don’t charge anyone for information.

What I have said is that if there is a naked short position (and there’s good reason to believe there might be), then a backstop—like a preferred dividend or legal monetization—could trigger a squeeze.

If I’m wrong? I lose money. That’s investing. But if I’m right, those who kept denying the possibility may face a far greater reckoning.


And as for the idea that “no one would short at triple-zero prices”—you vastly underestimate how this works. Shorting doesn’t always happen at the current price. Legacy shorts remain from higher levels. Others may be operating offshore where margin rules and disclosure standards are… let’s just say, lax. Deny it all you want, but don’t pretend that the SEC hasn’t investigated similar patterns before (Overstock, GME, etc.).

So keep calling names if it makes you feel better. I’ll stick to facts, logic, and patience. The truth always comes out.

—Krombacher