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Spidy

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About Spidy

  • Birthday 11/05/1967

Converted

  • Location
    Bedford,TX
  • Interests
    Fishing mostly, all sports, MY KIDS!!
  • Occupation
    INVESTOR
  • My Facebook Profile ID
    http://www.facebook.com/?ref=home#!/Spidy11?ref=profile

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  1. First thing is pay your taxes up front. This will happen once the parliment that is seated votes in the PM next week and 24 hours later the Supreme court will announce allawi the Pm and then the RV WILL BE OUT.
  2. First thing is pay your taxes up front. This will happen once the parliment that is seated votes in the PM next week and 24 hours later the Supreme court will announce allawi the Pm and then the RV WILL BE OUT.
  3. Cnn headline from Pm and when they plan on Supreme Court to approve new government. (CNN) -- Hours after insurgents killed dozens of people on Tuesday in a new wave of bomb attacks in Baghdad, former Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi said he hopes to soon form a new government after claiming victory in the March 7 ballot. "We need the (election) results to be officially announced by the Supreme Court, and then I guess it will take us in the range of two months to form ... I hope to form ... a government," Allawi told CNN's Christiane Amanpour. Allawi said he believes his Iraqiya bloc, which has a narrow two-seat lead in parliament over his main rival, has the right to form the next government under the country's constitution. Iraqiya won 91 seats and current Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's State of the Law coalition won 89 seats, according to the provisional election results. "We can't just have a national unity government, a government which has been stagnant as the current government has been," he said. "We need to have a government that can function and can provide, especially for the security of this country." His comments came amid new concerns that security in Iraq is beginning to unravel in what many say is a political vacuum following the elections. Insurgents exploded at least seven bombs in Baghdad on Tuesday, killing more than 30 people and wounding 140 others. It was the latest in a series of attacks that have killed more than 100 people in five days. "I expected this violence, especially after the elections, because there is a vacuum, and there is indeed a constitutional vacuum at this time," Allawi said. "And indeed the terrorists and groups who are linked to terrorism would find the political environment useful for them to start damaging and inflicting more damage on the Iraqi people." Former U.S. National Security Council official Brett McGurk said Iraq has not seen any signposts of real deterioration despite the upsurge in violence. "We haven't seen militias take to the streets to protect neighborhoods," he said. "We've not seen the ministries stand down, things we started to see in 2006." Allawi said the success of his bloc in the elections showed that the Iraqi people were fed up with sectarianism. "They want to see a secular country with a professional, functional government, and they want to get out of the bottleneck that we are in now," he said. He rejected the arguments of critics who say Allawi's bloc is a front organization for former Baathists who served in the Saddam Hussein regime. "The Baath .. are finished. It's ended. We are in a new era," he said. See more of Amanpour's coverage online Allawi said he was talking to other political parties about the formation of a new government coalition -- including supporters of the influential Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, whose followers won some 40 seats in parliament. "The Sadrists are welcome to join it," he said. "We are talking to them already. And the discussions are progressing well." Allawi said there was a big difference between political supporters of al-Sadr and its once powerful Jaish al-Mahdi militia. The former U.S. Ambassador to Iraq, Ryan Crocker, said he was not concerned about the potential role of al-Sadr's supporters in a coalition government. Crocker said: "The Sadrists have always had an appeal to the dispossessed urban Shia populations, and they finally found a way to get their act together sufficiently to garner a respectable number of seats." "But clearly they are not going to form a government," he said. "They may be instrumental in the government's formation, but they're going to have to be part of the give-and-take of Iraqi politics as well." Crocker, however, said he believed Allawi was being overly optimistic when he said he could form a government in two months. "I think a more realistic deadline is the beginning of Ramadan at the start of August," Crocker said. "So I worry about a decision to have us down to 50,000 (American) troops perhaps in the same month that a new government is formed." Crocker was referring to the planned withdrawal of all U.S. combat troops from Iraq by the end of August, leaving a residual force of 50,000 troops until a final U.S. withdrawal scheduled for the end of 2011.
  4. I agree, This will happen way before June, and most likely before May, My estimates from my sources say before the 15th of this month and at approx 3 plus. Good Luck ALL., i DONT NEED ANYTHING BUT THE FOREX TO TELL ME WHEN AND HOW MUCH.
  5. I agree if that is the case of taking credit, but is a good post, never the less
  6. It will, The new PM will be a HERO!
  7. Spidy

    March 30th

    Launch timetable for GCC single currency on March 30 Riyadh meet to finalise financial infrastructure, setting up central bank Zawya Dow Jones Published: 00:00 March 25, 2010 Kuwait City: A timetable for when a single Gulf currency will be launched as well as a decision on which currency, or basket of currencies it will be pegged to, will be made at a meeting in Riyadh on March 30, Kuwait's central bank governor said Wednesday. At the March 30 meeting "plans will be designed and a time frame finalised for the financial infrastructure required to launch a single currency and for the [establishment] of the Gulf central bank," Shaikh Salem Abdul Aziz Al Sabah told reporters at a press conference. When asked if the Gulf single currency could be pegged to the US dollar, Al Sabah said "I don't know." Saudi Arabia's central bank governor said in March 2009 that the single currency could initially be pegged to the dollar and then allowed to float. Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar and Bahrain are forging ahead with plans for a monetary union after the UAE and Oman opted out of the plans. The UAE dropped out last year after it was decided that the union's central bank will be based in Riyadh, the Saudi capital. Economists argue that the Gulf monetary union needs to establish monetary independence for member states, all of which are pegged to the US dollar, except Kuwait. But Kuwait is pegged to a basket of currencies in which the dollar is expected to dominate. The peg forces Gulf countries to mimic US Federal Reserve actions, such as interest rate cuts, despite having a very different economic and inflationary environment to the US. "The GCC should gain monetary independence," said Philippe Dauba-Pantanacce, Standard Chartered Bank's senior economist for the Middle East and North Africa. UAE won't join union UAE Central Bank Governor Sultan Bin Nasser Al Suwaidi said there are currently no talks aimed at bringing his country to rejoin the Gulf monetary union. Bloomberg
  8. Yesterday is bye-bye, sit tight and see what happens when there banks open tomorrow on there religious holiday, and prepare for sunday.
  9. That is old stuff, everyone is awaiting Sunday
  10. Thanks for the post, everything is in place
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