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enlightened1

02/14/06 7:24 AM

#8537 RE: enlightened1 #8536

Can anyone tell me what causes certain lines to jump a line within a sentence when submitting the post? To understand what I mean, if you will notice in my last post, just before this, the sentence is broken up by it moving to the next line before the end of the line has been reached.

Maybe it just happens when I have prepared it in Word or some other place. However, it is always correct when I copy it.

If you can - thanks. If not, no sweat.

Investorman

02/14/06 7:54 AM

#8538 RE: enlightened1 #8536

You could take out a loan, second mortgage on your home, for say $250,000 dollars and for this you would get 625,000 shares (at .40c a share) So in or about just four weeks you would receive, at least, $687,000 dollars (625,000X $1.10. You pay off your loan and you are left with just under half a million.

You are suggesting that people mortgage their home to buy into a non-reporting pink sheet stock? Are you nuts?



hard data

02/14/06 10:05 AM

#8540 RE: enlightened1 #8536

Tell me, enlightened, if Downs had all of these successful ventures prior to going public, including a HLS business worth $40 million plus for a minority share sale, why did he decide to go public in the first place? Companies only go public for two reasons; to raise capital for expansion, which according to Downs' story he didn't need, or to monitize insider holdings. When they go public accompanied by multiple promoters pushing the stock, and the company provides zero information about operations, guess which reason leaps to mind.

Or does Downs simply want to be a good guy and give away a "dividend" that he already owned?

janice shell

02/14/06 9:46 PM

#8568 RE: enlightened1 #8536

my earlier post in which it was very emphatically stated IN WRITING (no ifs and buts) that there would be NO Reverse Split...

Tons of penny stock CEOs say that, and then later do it. Their excuse: "Circumstances have changed".

Don't even think about that second mortgage. When playing the pennies, NEVER put more in the pot than you can afford to lose.