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Re: planetaryfuture post# 4388

Sunday, 11/06/2011 2:47:15 PM

Sunday, November 06, 2011 2:47:15 PM

Post# of 18730
Here comes the Kudzu pest while COIN appears to fade away. This remark conveys both a recognition of tragic melodrama one currently sees unfolding on our planet along with an ironic note of comedy. Apparently, the Kudzu bug landed near Atlanta in 2009, and has now infested every county in Georgia, and is hitting the Carolina's hard. The Kudzu is known to be hearty without natural predators in the States since it is a hitch-hiking invader from Asia. Our farmers are very concerned about this recent Kudzu invasion, and still looking for effective interventions. One locates plenty of information about the onset of Kudzu bugs from a cursory Google search. I wonder if Ed has heard about this pest?

I wish COIN might learn to market the "vision" of what COIN represents to the hordes of energetic brilliant youth who now live in tents trying to make a voice for the so-called 99%. Many of these courageous souls would likely work enthusiastically, and tirelessly for very little once they embraced a vision of COIN's global potential toward planetary healing. Seriously! Some great sales promotion prospects may be getting maced instead of finding an opportunity to work with COIN. It looks like the shareholders of COIN are also getting a lot of gas.

The irony is we have yet another sound reason with the advent of the Kudzu "stink bug" to more seriously consider a Terra Sphere model for agricultural propagation. The need for healthy food cultivation choices increase while solutions are on the verge of evaporation. This fact of reality defies logic.

Other positive points remain: 24-7 All natural cultivation, significant reduction of transportation costs, more timely delivery to market, harvest as needed without delays, elimination of herbicides and pesticides, no need to till the soil or own acreage anywhere, no tractors or other farm equipment needed, eliminate the prospect of rooster's crowing before the sun rises, Terra Sphere grow facility potential exists everywhere between the north and south pole, creates delivery potential of precise organic nutrients as required for optimal growth of the plants, waste-free delivery of water needs, specific labor requirements quantifiable, potential elimination of bacterial infections from animal compost, controlled monitoring, and greater potential to eliminate crop destruction from Mother Nature's unforeseen acts of destruction. It seems these points should be enough for intelligent people to seriously consider Terra Sphere as a viable agricultural solution. If so, then let's discuss overhead costs of a Terra Sphere facility in practical terms.

With such compelling reasons to move in a healthy direction, why is COIN floundering, and gasping for a last breath? Is there a hidden corporate giant hiding in a dark closet angling to smother the growth of COIN? Let's face it, to a corporate behemoth like Monsanto, the entire valuation of COIN has to represent little more than pocket change.

Scenario from outer space: Did leadership have a sudden epiphany after downing a half-dozen scotches, then decide to short COIN to death so they could pocket massive reserves then slip away to a tropical island crawling with half-naked women? Historically, a few jokes are known to hold relevance.

Lastly, All content of my posts represent entirely my own opinions or may be manifestations of my quirky creativity. Don't take anything I say too seriously, unless you happen to agree. Nothing I say should be construed as an inducement to either buy or sell any securities whatsoever. I am a concerned shareholder of COIN who hopes they are able to recover, that's all.

Best Wishes