Guest views are now limited to 12 pages. If you get an "Error" message, just sign in! If you need to create an account, click here.

Jump to content

Munsch

Platinum VIP
  • Posts

    2,362
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Munsch

  1. My next question is this ... What is the time stamp inside your email?
  2. Keep clicking on links and finally on that same webpage I got to a break down page: http://www.exchangerates.org.uk/IQD-USD-21_07_2011-exchange-rate-history.html Iraqi Dinar US Dollar Date 1 IQD = 0.1477 USD 0.1477 IQD = 1 USD on 21/07/2011 5 IQD = 0.7385 USD 0.7385 IQD = 5 USD on 21/07/2011 10 IQD = 1.477 USD 1.477 IQD = 10 USD on 21/07/2011 15 IQD = 2.2155 USD 2.2155 IQD = 15 USD on 21/07/2011 20 IQD = 2.954 USD 2.954 IQD = 20 USD on 21/07/2011 25 IQD = 3.6925 USD 3.6925 IQD = 25 USD on 21/07/2011 50 IQD = 7.385 USD 7.385 IQD = 50 USD on 21/07/2011 100 IQD = 14.77 USD 14.77 IQD = 100 USD on 21/07/2011 500 IQD = 73.85 USD 73.85 IQD = 500 USD on 21/07/2011 1000 IQD = 147.7 USD 147.7 IQD = 1000 USD on 21/07/2011 2500 IQD = 369.25 USD 369.25 IQD = 2500 USD on 21/07/2011 5000 IQD = 738.5 USD 738.5 IQD = 5000 USD on 21/07/2011 10000 IQD = 1477 USD 1477 IQD = 10000 USD on 21/07/2011 25000 IQD = 3692.5 USD 3692.5 IQD = 25000 USD on 21/07/2011 50000 IQD = 7385 USD 7385 IQD = 50000 USD on 21/07/2011 100000 IQD = 14770 USD 14770 IQD = 100000 USD on 21/07/2011 250000 IQD = 36925 USD 36925 IQD = 250000 USD on 21/07/2011 500000 IQD = 73850 USD 73850 IQD = 500000 USD on 21/07/2011 1000000 IQD = 147700 USD 147700 IQD = 1000000 USD on 21/07/2011
  3. Either that or firing a programmer? Also ... Has anyone seen this happening on any other currency pairing besides the IQD/GBP???
  4. Please open a seperate post for un-related questions in the proper location. But to answer your question ... IMO ... No you don't need a receipt unless it would fall under a tax reason of capital gains but we do not know that answer yet until it happens about the tax.
  5. Tiffany23 is not VIP so you will have to go to her profile and leave a comment just like she left on yours.
  6. You should just be able to go to the PM they sent you in your inbox and towards the bottom there is a reply box ... just type in it and add reply. You may want to make sure the other person's mailbox is not full which can also prevent them from receiving. As stated up above you can also leave a message on their profile if they allow it. Oh and I show that you are VIP ... who is the other member?
  7. Which ever site or person who stated they contacted these politicians and were told this .... ohhhh ... I hope they aren't lying ... bombarding a banks phones one thing but I wouldn't want to get on the wrong side of that many politicians ... good or bad ... they have connections and can bring down hammers.
  8. Guess they didn't get that memo or TPS report???
  9. Down very bottom of website in middle where it says "Get Important Updates in your Email" ... Sign up there and you should get any of those in future if I am not mistaken.
  10. I will merge them ... Interesting how it says dollar for dollar and the 3 days ago thing. Getting excited is all I can say.
  11. This topic needs to stay on track and stick to the subject at hand. Quit the bickering or I will not be a nice person today.
  12. Yesterday I watched a show on History channel I think about RVs. The one where a guy made an old fire engine into a huge RV and those very small 2 person RVs.
  13. I think the system lags a little on the active sync for this acurate numbers.
  14. Make sure you are signed up for his newsletter down at very bottom ... also check the chat forum for latest chats of his
  15. The reason for a lock out is so people don't edit their posts later just to say "I didn't say that, look at my post it doesn't say that" .... now as far as the time limit ... I don't think there really is one but it is more effected by say when another member replies to your post before you can finish editing it, which locks you out. I think it is unlimited as long as no one else posts before you finish and you don't post or click on anywhere else? (I could be wrong though there may be still a time limit since I haven't really tested this fully.) I would advise to start any larger posts first in say a Word editor than correct any mistakes before pasting into the post if you really want to be 100% on your post. Other than that post again as say what your correction is.
  16. Thanks Markinsa .... I am glad I recommended you. Basically what he said Tiff.
  17. PM usage is for VIP For those who are non-VIP you will have to leave a post on their profile itself if that user allows posts to be made on their profile.
  18. Forgotten in the shadow of the Arab Uprisings and facing an undefined 'Iranian threat', Iraq is about to agree to long-term American 'Occupation lite'. Iraq fatigue has led to a series of critical events in the country being largely ignored. There is of course the continued insecurity with June being the deadliest month for Iraqis this year with 271 people killed and another 35 more massacred in a car bombing in Taji at the start of July. Meanwhile 14 US soldiers also died in June, making it the deadliest month for the US in three years. However after eight years and a significant decrease in violence from the peak of the civil conflict with attacks down from an average of 49 a day in 2008 to 14 now, the media has grown deaf to the casual horror the country faces. Christian Science Monitor bemoaned how "all our Iraq stories -- whether features with strong, unique reporting; analysis pieces on the security situation; or simply straightforward accounts of a major bombing or political meeting -- can't get any traction at all". The US, currently drawing down its 46,000 soldiers, is debating leaving between 10,000-13,000 troops in the country beyond the December SOFA deadline. This number is in addition to the largest US embassy on the planet and consulates around the country including a newly opened building in Basra. In response the fragmented Iraqi body-politic is busy attempting the difficult task of finding the rhetoric to accede to US demands whilst still maintaining the veneer of sovereignty. The US presence in the country is evolving into 'occupation-lite'. The Iraqi leaders know it doesn't taste very nice but are persuaded that it's good for them. This is largely due to the US acting as a powerful praetorian guide to the nascent institutions of state and concerns with the actions of the country's neighbors. Although the US has spent almost a decade building up the Iraqi military and security institutions there are significant gaps in terms of logistics and air power in particular. To prepare the war weary US public for the blow that the US will not be leaving Iraq the military have started reminding people of the Iranian and Al Qaeda threats. During a visit to Iraq this month, the new Defense Secretary, Leon Panetta spoke the 1,000 AQ operatives still in Iraq and of his concerns of weapons coming in from Iran; warning that "this is not something we're going to walk away from. It's something we're going to take on head on." The media has fallen in line to support Panetta's analysis, the Wall Street Journal has reported that "Shi'a militias in Iraq supported and directed by Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Qods Force -- Kata'ib Hezbollah in particular, but also Asaib Ahl al Haq, and the Promised Day Brigades -- are increasing both the level and sophistication of attacks". While AFP has interviewed US weapons analysts in Baghdad who say they have no doubt of Iran's signature on dissected rockets fired at their troops. To add fuel to the fire this week Iranian news agencies reported that the government in Tehran "reserve the right to attack and destroy terrorist bases in (Iraqi) border areas". The key questions to be addressed are; is it in Iran's interests to ratchet up attacks and risk the US leaving 10,000 soldiers on its western border? Can the US afford not to leave an 'insurance presence' of troops in Iraq considering the dangerously unpredictable mood across the region? Is the US presence linked to continued domestic uncertainties in Iraq? Indeed in regards to the final question the narrative of the Arab Spring has been largely ignored in Iraq. After all aren't the uprisings about throwing off the shackles of authoritarian dictatorships, not free democracies? Yet the shockwaves of the revolutions are being felt in Iraq. Last week CNN reported Iraqi forces beating and detaining at least seven protestors as hundreds of angry demonstrators gathered Friday in central Baghdad. Since early February, tens of thousands of protesters have participated in demonstrations every Friday across Iraq. Maliki, like his embattled western neighbor Assad, has approached the demonstrations with his own variety of carrots and sticks. He cut his $350,000 salary in half, plans to cut the government to 25 ministerial positions by merging the ministries that perform overlapping functions and has sought to make a constitutional change to ensure a two-term limit to the office of the Prime Minister. What is more following the initial protests the Iraqi government announced that they would be cancelling the planned purchase of 18 US made F-16 fighter planes in favor of allocating the money to improving food rationing for the poor. The sticks meanwhile includes standard acts of violence as well as drafting legislation that Human Rights Watch believes criminalizes free speech and Iraqis right to demonstrate. The authorities have tried to bar street protests and confine them (unsuccessfully) to football stadiums, meanwhile several incidents of the security forces attacking and killing protestors have been reported, including a bloody encounter on the 25th of February where 12 people were killed and over 100 injured. The US appears largely unconcerned by the spread of protests to Iraq, with its focus on ensuring its strategic posture in the country. This cedes space in the battle for legitimacy being waged, mostly through proxy, by the Iranians. The actions of Muqtada al-Sadr in the face of an extension of the US presence will be particularly scrutinized. His group controls 39 seats in the gridlocked 325-member parliament. Last April Sadr issued a statement promising that "if the Americans don't leave Iraq on time, we will increase the resistance and restart the activities of the Mahdi Army". However it is hard to evaluate how cohesive the once feared Mahdi Army is. The Asaib al-Haq and Promised Day Brigade splinter groups are evidence of Sadr's difficulty in maintaining political control. Indeed in recent weeks he appears to have backtracked somewhat from bombastic threats against the US although what exactly he will do remains an unknown. Although the country and its daily toils barely make the news these days, Iraq is truly at a crossroads with a decision on its long term relationship with the US likely to define, for better or worse, the direction for the country for years to come.
  19. Probably in the rumor section some where?
  20. The IRS is not a bank or money exchange ... there is no reason they would be cashing us out. Only there to advise us of our tax liabilities.
  21. So which is it? 4 "trillion" or "billion" ... I have heard conflicting rumors. I know our debt is what about 14 trillion from what I saw on Yahoo this morning?
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.