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IchDien

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  1. I've been thinking the same thing. We already know that Ch7 is over, so there is no reason for them to scream, except to put on a show and act, which it seems they forgot to do. I think Erbil is done too, since there seems to be no real outrage over not getting it done either. Now there are some small news clips about fluctuations in the Dinar...makes me think prepping for RV.
  2. The RV will happen regardless what we do or don't do here. The Iraqi people are likely going to demand a more worthy currency, especially considering the wealth the country makes. It's just a matter of time. Go about your days as normal and one day your day will be exceptionally bright.
  3. Ch7 is done, clearly, just waiting for the official press release.
  4. LOL, you want a link to a post on thought put in the opinions section?
  5. Vietnam’s PVI Holdings sees 2012 gross profit up 55.6 pct: report December 15th, 2011 03:58 pm · Posted in NEWS (Iraq & World Currency) Vietnam’s PVI Holdings has projected its gross profit next year will jump 55.6 percent from 2011 to VND700 billion ($33.3 million), a local newspaper reported on Wednesday. Its gross profit would hit 450 billion dong this year, exceeding its annual target by 7 percent, Chief Executive Officer Bui Van Thuan was quoted in the magazine Dau Tu Chung Khoan as saying. The higher profit next year is projected as revenue is expected to rise by a quarter to VND6.5 trillion from VND5.2 trillion expected this year, Thuan was quoted as saying. The projected 55.6-percent rise in profit next year is faster than this year’s profit growth of 34 percent, as PVI Holdings expects to boost its core business in the insurance sector and expand coverage to overseas markets, the report said. PVI shares were trading down 1.66 percent at VND17,800 apiece at 0310 GMT on Wednesday. PVI Holdings, a Hanoi-listed subsidiary of state oil and gas group Petrovietnam, is 25 percent owned by a subsidiary of Germany’s third-biggest insurer, Talanx. Formerly known as Petrovietnam Insurance Joint-Stock Corporation, the company was restructured in June to form PVI Holdings, which included its non-life insurance business as a subsidiary. Oman Investment Fund owns 12.6 percent in PVI Holdings, which holds a monopoly on Vietnam’s energy insurance market. The group has a 25 percent share of the country’s non-life insurance market, providing risk coverage and insurance for property in the energy and maritime sectors.
  6. Obama still thinks Iraq is good investment for his future December 15th, 2011 03:59 pm · Posted in NEWS (Iraq & World Currency) U.S. occupation of Iraq has always been a profitable commodity for U.S. President Barack Obama. Obama, who came to power in January 2009, snatched his position by raising “withdrawal from Iraq” as a slogan in his presidential campaign. Today he is back to the same slogan, by turning his withdrawal from Iraq into an electoral issue. Obama’s invitation for Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to visit the White House was part of his effort to remind U.S. electorate that he is a man who honors his promises – again he is using Iraq as an electoral chip. But Obama’s opponents from the Republican Party have other cards to play, namely courting Israel, which many believe is a better card to play in the U.S. But let us turn to the situation on the ground, the Iraqi battlefield. Does the U.S. think that the wars it has waged – among the one in Iraq – are futile and achieved nothing? Has the U.S. learned the lesson not to repeat such wars and do its best to avoid them, deploying diplomacy to settle political crises, particularly in the Middle East? These are legitimate questions if we want to know whether the U.S. has peace or war as part of its agenda. The wars the U.S. waged in the aftermath of 9/11 were surprising in the sense of their immediacy, lack of right reparation and the use of false justifications. The long time it has taken U.S. troops fighting both the Iraq and Afghanistan wars shows the target of waging such devastating wars was not to reinstate peace and justice and then return home. These wars were part of a strategic agenda to deploy U.S. troops in new areas and acquire more influence and advantages which Washington did not have before. Reports of casualties were censored and their influence on public opinion got lost amid the power media and politics exercise in the U.S. As for material losses, these were only taken into consideration when new taxes were imposed and little attention was paid to crooked methods reconstruction companies in Iraq, like Halliburton pursued. By the way Halliburton’s chief executive was reported to be **** Cheney, former U.S. vice-president and Iraq War godfather. A decade, the approximate time the U.S. has spent in each of Iraq and Afghanistan, is enough to build countries from scratch and not engage in laughable reconstruction projects. How come that a superpower like the U.S. could not even solve an issue like electricity in Iraq and now leaves a country plunged into darkness. The U.S. leaves and Obama sort of celebrates end of mission while Iraq bleeds from the deep wounds it inflicted on a nation of 30 million people. Hundreds of thousands of innocent Iraqis have been either killed or wounded, millions uprooted and the county is torn by sectarian and ethnic strife, and still Obama thinks he has more to invest in it. This reporter clearly has a bias on the issue.
  7. I wonder the source of the source here...the toilet in jonnywig's outhouse?
  8. Even if I assumed your thinking were correct (even though you offered no evidence to support your claim that Dinar investors went from 3 to 6 million in 2011), the mere fact that your spelling and grammar is so bad that I can barely read your post makes me seriously doubt your math skills.
  9. I believe in miracles too. I bought Dinar, but only what I could actually afford. I also bought some Dong, who knows. I would never advise anyone buy more of anything than they could afford. I pray daily for miracles. God did say "command ye me." Well...through prayer, we command. If we pray, whether it be for RV, or what have you, I believe God provides, though not always in the manner we'd most like. In this case, I see the opportunity to buy the Dinar as a miracle in itself, I can only imagine what further miracles will come from the post RV as a result of having been blessed with being in it now.
  10. I don't think it means anything, other than they need to cancel orders that clearly won't be filled.
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