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Re: Speedo1 post# 9597

Monday, 01/09/2012 8:18:12 PM

Monday, January 09, 2012 8:18:12 PM

Post# of 28713
The Good, Bad, and Ugly

My total lifetime knowledge of business consist of one hour at age 4 in front of my Mom & Dad house at a lemonaid stand.

Lets highlight the many thoughts of posters on this board over the past year, and then put into focus how our government can deal with Bourque Industries as a national treasure.

While the armor characterists of our alloy is proven, the data of its other users, especially as a better replacement for both a solid substitude and coating has not been made public, lets assume that enough examingation has been conducted independently by government officerals at those super high tech facilities where material from the Area 51 crash site of the alien ship are still being looked at without any success to reverse engineer or duplicate their technology, but these folks have successfully tested our alloy and determined that indeed it is an important and major breakthru that will have a great and positive impact to any country having it available.

Gosh, my highschool dropout English grammer is poor right now with them three voices talking to me all at once.

Rather than focus on the military implications, lets focus on the impact for a country that has a superior manufactured product with resulting negative effect that places on other countries that will still be making products for sale at the same cost having less quality and durability.

Ugly
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Imagine if the industrial power houses like Alcoa and other metal/alloy producers flex their political muscle to deny our alloy from being used in near all aspects of manufacturing, and at the same time China, Korea, India, Russia etc learn how to make our alloy and disregard out patends. A simple example being making cars with our duplicated alloy such that the car has the same strength with a 20% decrease in weight that results in a 20% improvement in gas mileage. Imagine the same for air craft, boats, trains, farm equipment, etc and these nations would shut down the United States manufacturing industry since our products are inferior at the same cost.

Bad
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Bourque Industries needs to accept that it can not "do it alone" or "go alone" and try to replace and push aside the established industries of today that now have the contracts to build and repair and replace the interstructure of the United States, plus any military upgrades and new stuff, but to accept that our technology needs to be placed into their hands so that they can switch from their current alloys, into producing and using ours. This needs Bourque Industries to get guarantees and safeguards from our government that the interests of current shareholders are both protected and not diminished when our technology is shared with the big boys.

Good
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No need for Bourque Industries to try and replace the big boys and do it all and be the only manufacturer making our alloy, and the only place where the final product is made. Thats a pipe dream never to happen, and if it did it would be disruptive and take twenty years to completion and never happen since other countries like China etc would step on our patends and develope their new alloy industries in two, not twenty years.

So lets hope John Bourque early this year will disclose in public that talks with our government on how Bourque Industries as a national treasure is being planned with rapid deployment.

If not the UGLY will be replaced for us shareholders as something far more nasty.

Doug

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