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VICTORIALAWIZZA

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Everything posted by VICTORIALAWIZZA

  1. I have bought Dinar from E-bay over 500,000.00 in large and small bills I have had no bad experiences or forged bills in the last 2 yrs. Alway look at the sellers ratings and check the comment section for issues! Be sure you know what you are buying before you pay for it, If you have questions contact the seller! Always use paypal for payment or major credit card. If you have any discrepencies, they can help get your money back from the sellers. Just my opinion and experience.
  2. Thanks for that information. Very well written and explained in laymon terms for all to understand!
  3. All the hoopla on the Dinar has made the VND totally disappear from all of our radars for a while. I am also invested in the VND and would like to hear any news on the currency.
  4. Iraq: Preliminary Surprise in the Parliamentary Polls Stratfor Today
  5. Chief V thank you for the update and for your Service for the country, any information from the home front of Iraq is greatly appreciated.
  6. IRAQ STILL COUNTING VOTES, NO RESULT YET UK news Iraqis were still awaiting preliminary results Thursday four days after a national election they hoped would bring stable government and help end years of sectarian conflict as U.S. troops ready to leave. http://uk.news.yahoo.com/22/20100311/tpl-uk-iraq-election-81f3b62.html? /=/=/ IRAQ ELECTION MEANS LIFE OR DEATH FOR U.S. ALLY LA Times Hunkered down in a community outside Baghdad, Raad Ali watched the national elections Sunday in anonymity. No one bothers him here. Strangers think he is just another displaced Iraqi from the capital. http://www.latimes.com/news/nation-and-world/la-fg-iraq-raad11-2010mar11,0,4895708.story? /=/=/ MALIKI, ALLAWI AHEAD IN IRAQ COUNT Al-Jazeera Middle East Nouri al-Maliki, the incumbent prime minister, and Iyad Allawi, a former prime minister, are leading in Iraq's general election, initial results have shown. Thursday's results put al-Maliki's coalition ahead in Najaf and Babil provinces south of Baghdad, while Allawi leads in two provinces north and east of Baghdad. http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2010/03/2010311161339154309.html /=/=/ EARLY ELECTION RESULTS SHOW TIGHT RACE IN IRAQ NPR News Partial vote results in Iraq's historic election released Thursday showed a tight contest between the nation's prime minister and a secular challenger during a chaotic count that was marred by accusations of fraud. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=124564662&ft=1&f=1001 /=/=/ IRAQI'S DISPUTE ELECTION FRAUD McClatchy-Tribune Information Services BAGHDAD
  7. I wouldn't recommend not paying your house off with this investment, unless you are into stocks, bonds and short term investments and know when to sell and when to stay, that market is very tricky, and you must be able to understand how to play that game. Just my 2 cents!!!
  8. I can't believe that someone accually took the time to post that from Medic, It gave us nothing, but you did waist alot of peoples time with that post.
  9. There are 2 different chats 1 for the VIP's and the other is for everyone. The chat will be tonight at 8:30 cst. in the main chat room. Every one can participate.
  10. good info to know, I hope that they do take the taxes when I cash in that way I just claim it on taxes next year and know that I haven't spent it on other things.
  11. The US will also benefit from all of us cashing in, just think of all the taxes that we will pay in to the government that they wouldn't already have. Also the money into the economy, the purchasing power by all of us with our Millions of dollars being spent in the U.S. The U.S. Government does care about the RV as much as we do. Just my thoughts! BRING ON THE RV!!!!
  12. Welcome to the ride of your lifes, Best advise to you is read, watch and make up your own mind what to believe, Buy Adams Book, It gives you the most information that he has researched for you. join the chats and ask questions, there are alot of very knowlegable people in this forum, good luck and hope this ride ends very soon! WELCOME ABOARD!!!
  13. That question depends on how much your going to aquire after the RV and cash in takes place, But for me reinvest in realestate, savings accounts for the grandkids, my children there own homes. And Party, travel, and Party some more.After paying taxes of course... ugh!!!
  14. Wjp welcome to the craziest ride of your life, always glad to have new people join to voice new opinions. Welcome aboard!
  15. How come this wasn't put in the VIP section for the members to read? anyway, Thanks Adam for the reaccurrance that this isn't a dream, that there is hope for the RV of the Dinar. Patience is all we need!
  16. Iraq: Boycott Not Solution - Sunni Leader February 15, 2010 Saleh Al-Mutlaq , an Iraqi Sunni leader, said on Feb. 15 that a Sunni boycott to elections will not solve a political standoff, The Washington Post reported. Al-Mutlaq has been banned to run in the March elections. At a meeting in Baghdad of tribal leaders, al-Mutlaq said Sunnis will not shy away from any choice should they realize the elections are rigged. He said he awaits a response from Iraq's leading government officials, saying that the two sides should "join hands." He added that Sunnis will not allow Iran to force how the Iraqi elections are run. Quick Links...
  17. Iraq's Accountability and Justice Committee, headed by Ahmed Chalabi, has banned all but 93 of the 535 candidates that had been initially disqualified from participation in Iraq's March 7 election due to alleged ties to Saddam Hussein's Baath party, the AP reported Feb. 14. Chalabi said in his first press conference since the ban on candidates was announced that the Baath party should be named a terrorist organization by the Iraqi parliament. Chalabi's panel has been accused of targeting Sunni candidates, and its legality has been disputed.
  18. UN Secretary-General of the United Nations Ban Ki-moon, Kuwait and Iraq to redouble their efforts to achieve progress concrete the question of missing persons and Kuwaiti property, saying: that such progress will help Iraq out of Chapter VII of the Charter of the United Nations.It was reported that the Security Council in its quarterly report on the activities of the UN mission in Iraq, he said: While there are some initial positive results, but no further progress in the issue of missing persons and Kuwaiti property. Ban also welcomed the cabinet decision to contribute $974 thousand dollars in the project sponsored by UNAMI and the United Nations Office for Project Services to support the Iraqi Human Rights Ministry in prospecting for mass graves and identification of the missing Kuwaitis. The secretary-general of the UN Special Representative in Iraq, Ad Melkert visited Baghdad in the last period and discussed during the visit with senior officials there outstanding issues between Iraq and Kuwait regarding the conditions of Chapter VII of the Charter of the United Nations. On the other hand, research and Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari, Iraq's head of the International Commission on Missing Jonathan McCaskill ways of the future work of the Committee to support the Iraqi government's efforts to address the issue of persons missing since the wars in Iran and Kuwait, and they add thousands of mass graves of the former regime. A dossier of Kuwait, officials confirmed the mission, the atmosphere today is better than a year ago, and there is progress in the file holder of prisoners andmissing persons between the two countries, numbering about 1500 people between the Iraqi and Kuwaiti and these are the victims of the Second Gulf War in 1991 when the armies of the International Alliance remove Iraqi forces from Kuwait, which was occupied by the summer of 1990
  19. March elections offer Iraq chance to move beyond conflict to development, Ban says 12 February 2010 - Next month's elections offer Iraqis the chance to move beyond the bloody conflict of the past seven years towards long-term political and economic stability, but armed groups may repeat their recent high-profile attacks to disrupt the process, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon warns in his latest report on the country. "I appeal to the people of Iraq not to be deterred, in the face of these and other criminal acts, from exercising their democratic rights," he says, citing among other attacks the coordinated series of suicide bombings in Baghdad in December in which scores of civilians were killed and injured immediately after the successful adoption of the electoral law. "I also urge the Government of Iraq and its security forces to redouble efforts in the lead-up to the elections to ensure that the elections are as peaceful as possible," he adds, stressing that every effort must be made to ensure that the poll is broadly participatory and as inclusive as possible. "A credible election process will greatly contribute to national reconciliation and give Iraqi leaders a new impetus to work together in a spirit of national unity to rebuild their country after years of conflict. It will also serve to strengthen Iraq's sovereignty and independence at this key juncture in Iraq's history as the United States prepares to draw down its military presence." Mr. Ban pledges the full support of the UN Assistance Mission in Iraq (UNAMI), which has already helped in three previous polls, for the success of the 7 March elections in providing strong technical assistance to the Independent High Electoral Commission and helping to ensure that the results are widely accepted by the Iraqi people. Referring to the controversy over the possible disqualification of hundreds of candidates considered to have been closely linked to the Baath party of ousted, and later hanged, President Saddam Hussein, he calls for a transparent and non-discriminatory review, and appeals to all sided to use the mechanisms in place to submit complaints and abide by the final results once they are certified by the Federal Supreme Court. "I also hope that, once the new government is formed, the focus will shift gradually to accelerating the country's reconstruction and development," he writes, calling on those newly elected to resolve political and constitutional matters that could hinder Iraq's long-term political and economic stability, by adopting a viable revenue-sharing arrangement, a hydrocarbon law and settling the issue of disputed territories between the regions. "In this regard, the Iraqi people will expect to see greater efficiency, accountability and transparency on the part of their elected officials. If ordinary Iraqis witness an improvement in their daily lives, they will begin to feel that their votes made a difference," he says, highlighting the support of the entire UN system for a steady shift of focus from humanitarian response to longer-term development. He notes that 18.9 million voters have been allocated to some 50,000 polling stations in an election which will see 6,600 candidates nominated from 86 political entities or coalitions. The UN Office for Project Services (UNOPS) has funded an initiative to train over 29,000 domestic observers to monitor the polls. UNAMI has helped develop key procedures for a range of polling and counting processes, including those for regular polling and counting in polling stations on election day, absentee voting for internally displaced persons (IDPs) registered to vote for their governorate of origin, and special voting using either the voter list or a conditional ballot for several categories of voters unable to cast ballots in regular polling stations on election day. UNAMI electoral advisers have also trained Electoral Commission staff on best practices, and this staff will now train 360 governorate trainers over a two-week period. This will be followed by a cascade training programme that will ultimately ensure that approximately 300,000 polling station staff are able to conduct polling and counting processes. "UNAMI is supporting the Electoral Commission in developing a robust and timely complaints mechanism to ensure that the credibility of the results is not eroded by a delay in the adjudication of complaints," Mr. Ban adds. Reviewing the past three months since his last report, Mr. Ban cites continuing ethnic political disagreements in the Ninewa Governorate between Kurds, Arabs and others as "a matter of concern," while noting the agreement of the Government of Iraq and the Kurdistan Regional Government set up joint security structures in Kirkuk, Ninewa and Diyala to ease tensions. He calls on both governments to protect the rights of minorities and end forced displacement of minorities. "During the past year, hundreds of civilians have reportedly been killed in attacks that have targeted the Christian, Shabak, Turkmen and Yazidi communities," he writes. Among humanitarian priorities for the coming year, he includes the impact of drought, mine action, protection for IDPs, refugees and returnees, and supporting critical social safety nets. "The protection of civilians, particularly women, children and minority groups, remains a serious concern, as do the ongoing constraints due to lack of access and security that continue to hinder the ability of humanitarian organizations to effectively assess and respond to unmet needs," he says. "I again thank the donor community for its support in addressing humanitarian issues throughout this period and encourage continued engagement." News Tracker: past stories on this issue Source: United Nations Press Release Article Here
  20. If I wanted to discuss religion I would go to church, and there are already to much personal opinions on politic's, I believe in our freedom of speech, but this would just open a can of worms, I joined this forum for dinar information! everyone elses personal opinions on religion and politic's are not what I'm here for.
  21. how did you ever find that? I hope that you were laughing when you seen it.
  22. Possum, keep up the faith, prayer never hurts and wishful thinking.
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