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SYTI

03/05/24 6:24 PM

#2298 RE: moolamoola #2297

GEVI Hired a new auditor mid January so assume will file for extension THEN mid April we will see HOW GREAT this company is...last 2 years 134k gross sales. 1 customer LOL

WHY couldn't Conman sell the juice is other 5 companies he tried with past DECADE ??
IVE POSTED A TON OF PROOF (no comments lol)

Apparently needed Sr Ralston and his cronies to manipulate the stock BUT reality comes when YE gets posted. Then we will see the excuses and if some are even here any longer ;-)

Conman sauce isn't even proprietary...(patents all application methods for this sauce only)
ANYONE can make it...so why would anyone buy it ?

SMOKE N MIRRORS

SYTI

03/05/24 6:48 PM

#2299 RE: moolamoola #2297

Care to comment on this ?

ANOTHER old video, look at the product name.. its changed 10 times
Now he is the "inventor"
https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/wildfire/sd-me-fire-suppression-20171209-story.html

BY SANDRA DIBBLE
DEC. 9, 2017 7:35 PM PT
North County —
Carlsbad resident Stephen Conboy is a specialist in fire suppression and his work takes him around the country protecting lumber used for affordable housing projects against arson.
But as wildfires bring danger uncomfortably close to neighborhoods in northern San Diego County, Conboy is using his technique to protect his family and friends’ houses — and his own.
Saturday afternoon found him in Vista, spraying a water-based fire inhibitor known as AAF31 on a 3,000-foot California-style ranch house and large yard filled with tall eucalyptus, pines and palms.
HTTPS://YOUTU.BE/O9TBDFYG1JE
“We have to be proactive, we can’t be reactive,” said Conboy, president of Mighty Fire Suppression, Inc. “We can’t just watch neighborhoods burn down anymore.”
Conboy said he has sprayed a half dozen houses over the past couple of days as the Lilac fire — which started near Bonsall — moved west toward the coast.
The house and 1.2-acre property in Vista belong to Greg Huenergardt, who is Conboy’s dentist. Huenergardt said it is his dream house, where he raised his family, and he hopes to share it one day with his grandchildren.
As the wind picked up, Conboy’s two-man crew sprayed the liquid on wood surfaces, and the property’s numerous trees and bushes.
If fire comes, “this stuff is going to go up like a matchstick,” Huenergardt said. He offered to pay for the service, but Conboy turned him down.
Conboy’s core business involves preventing flames from destroying the lumber used by builders of affordable housing developments, which have been targeted by arsonists in some cities. Conboy has also worked with architects to show them how to protect lumber-built structures from fire.
Conboy said his new push to defend homes from wildfires “is not a revenue stream for me.”
“We are only trying to teach that we no longer need to lose so many houses to wildfires,” he said.
Conboy’s weapon, the AAF31 mixture, comes from a formula devised by an inventor in Malaysia who gave him the North American rights, he said. Conboy won’t divulge its contents, but said that the spray received a GreenGuard Gold certification from Underwriter Laboratories, meaning it has been deemed acceptable for use in places like schools and healthcare facilities.
The mixture is safe enough to be used around children, he said, and it does not destroy plants. Without rainfall, its protective cover can last for up to three months, he said.