Cool! So at least Spitzer doesn't think Butler is totally nuts. ===============================================================
Hi Dave, Welcome back from OZ. I hear it's hard to get over 'down under.' Get it? over and under... Oh, never mind! <gg>
Nuts? Butler? No way.
Spitzer's biggest problem is trying to figure out how to successfully and discretely ignore the tide of anti-COMEX/CFTC missives that are being directed to him and just about everyone in Washington who can read multisyllab+le words.
Hell, I signed the GATA/Butler inspired silver petition seventen times. That's how much I care! <g.
Btw, may I modestly mention that I'm heavily overweighted in silver shares with a special emphasis on WTZ. WTC to you.
Do you remember this from six weeks ago:
Western Silver Discovers New Mineralized Zone at Penasquito Monday January 26, 2:03 pm ET Results Further Enhance Property as a District-Scale Silver-Gold-Lead-Zinc Mineral System
VANCOUVER, British Columbia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jan. 26, 2004--Western Silver Corporation today announced the discovery of a new mineralized zone, El Chamisal, at its wholly-owned Penasquito silver, gold, zinc and lead property in central Mexico.
This new discovery is located approximately two kilometers northeast of the property's Chile Colorado zone which has been independently confirmed as one of the largest undeveloped silver deposits in the world.
"Today's drill results reinforce our belief that Penasquito is a district-scale mineral system(basser edit: Have you ever heard the term "district scale" before? How big is that?) with multiple deposits at different locations on the 147-square mile property," said Western's Mexican Exploration Manager, Thomas Turner. "We are encouraged that in addition to silver, we intersected significant grades of gold, lead and zinc at El Chamisal. Our drilling also enabled us to expand and further delineate other known zones of mineralization on the property," he said.
The El Chamisal discovery emerged from results of twenty-eight core and eleven shallow reverse circulation (RC) holes drilled at Penasquito during the past three months.