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goosemeister

04/13/05 11:07 AM

#102 RE: lcde #101

lcde, i am not saying that you are a pumper. if you email kevin keating, you will see a marked difference between what blue horseshoe has stated keating to have said and what keating will tell you in the email. if you read bh's post #58, you will see that he emailed the wrong keating. i, too, emailed tim keating, kevin's son, and he (tim) said nothing except to read the filings. kevin keating, on the other hand, will for whatever reason blatantly state what will happen once the merger is finalized. according to kevin, the share count will exceed 700 million. once i read that, i got out. while i would like to play mjet for the swings that may come, there are better stocks to daytrade that don't have an impending massive dilution, or atleast one that a major player is fully admitting.

until blue horseshoe got personal in message #94, i was fine with him. he chose to take the low road and take a cheap and unwarranted shot. it was uncalled for. what bothers me more, though, is when someone appears to be disguising his actual position or intention. he stated that he contacted kevin keating, yet his "reply" is unlike mine. anyone who reads this may wonder whose response from keating is authentic. i say to discard both of our stances and go straight to the man himself: keating. his email is for shareholders to use. he responded promptly to my email. please, email kevin at kevin.keating@justconnnect.net. there is no good reason not to. it makes no sense to me why a shareholder or a prospective shareholder would not email such a vital player in a possible merger, especially when he will respond.

even if you don't email keating, which is absurd if one is a shareholder or a prospective shareholder, the 8k reveals what will occur after or at the time of the merger. if mjet is not diluted (per the 3.8% figure post merger), then tell me where the 3.8% figure is in the current share structure. i have found it nowhere, and no post i've yet read has found it either. also, it is not as though keating investments has not before massively diluted a company at the time of a merger. go to keating's website and check lmii. at the time of the merger, the stock was diluted and then had an 88-1 reverse split.