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energy_wave

10/02/12 1:57 AM

#33073 RE: tradingfunds #33070

Those sure are fake pictures. You can see the smaller size pixels wherever they blended or covered over something with the spray brush tool. I have several versions of photoshop and know how to use it. The pictures they posted with the field of flowers in front of the mine was a joke. Easy to spot the blurring in along the cut lines. It doesn't matter though.

There is no stopping the SRGE money train!!!

We are about to break through resistance and move up to penny land. Everyone knows it. Everyone is waiting for it.

They're talking about SRGE all over i-hub. I was PM'ed earlier around 8:00 pm from someone on i-hub with a huge board and over 2,100 members and they are watching SRGE very closely.

SRGE is in the top 4 most read boards here. Even though we don't have a lot of posters, it is being read thousands of times each and every day. All it will take is news and chart fundamentals to trigger a massive run, just like we had last month around the 10th when the revenue news hit the wire.

Most investors now know SRGE has a working mine with 100% ownership of Cinco Minas. They are buying back shares and working to uplist. Pink sheets will no longer be necessary soon.

If you are waiting for the right moment to buy in, better not wait to long. The float is getting smaller and smaller by the day.

Tomorrow should be another green day with a lot of buying volume coming in to this one.



GLTA!!!

JMHO

tob999

10/02/12 5:14 AM

#33078 RE: tradingfunds #33070

Great posts TF that clearly illustrate the amateurish BGL attempts to doctor images in PhotoShop! I don't think I have ever seen such a poor effort in 20 years of Photoshopping! lol. The BGL campaign to discredit Southridge Minerals Inc. continues!

To explain to the uninitiated a digital photo is made up of pixels (little squares). In any photo (once zoomed in) these pixels become more visible. They should all be the same size!! Here is another of the BGL doctored images i took from the Bandera Gold website. On high magnification (+ 500%) you can see that there are pixel discrepancies (ie areas where the Blur Tool has most likely been used in conjunction with a block flat color having been composited onto the photo):