Finally, something accurate. Within the last hour you referred to the drop-off in November and December. A few hours before that you said revenues were dropping huge the last few months. Now you refer to December falling from November. So, we had to work through all that mess and stretch to finally get to a simple and obvious statement. December was down from November , lol. Amazing, lol.
And again, you're not making any sense. Now you claim November and December. November revenue was higher than September and October. A few hours ago you said;
Dropping huge these LAST FEW MONTHS????? Now you say November and December which would be the last two months not "few" months, and November revenue was larger than 3 of the 4 months that preceded it.
Glad I put those numbers up, lol. Few, two, down when it's actually up, doom and gloom, lmao.
I kinda like your post since I'll apply the same reasoning and ask: What part of revenues are up over $9.38 million for the year don't we get?
I'll take it a step further and ask (this is not a trick question): What looks better on the balance sheet--an increase of revenue for the year greater than 9 million dollars (130% increase over last year) or a monthly decline of 300 thousand knowing that there is some monthly variation in revenues?
Seems pretty straightforward to me as to what numbers are more significant with respect to what the company is achieving.