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Bocadinar

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Posts posted by Bocadinar

  1. Once again its just normal bandwidth issues.....we are KILLING them checkin the CBI site like mad people :lol: I know we want this bad and because of all the hype recently we are expecting it the next couple of days so we are stretching everything into meaning its about to happen.....check out this link im posting....posted this at the other site and they couldnt handle the reality of things and I was banned.... :lol: How dare I make it seem like anyone could be wrong about this meaning its going to RV :lol: .....sorry folks....wish it was something big but looking at the graph we are tripling our visits to the site this time of month....look at dec and the first big spike was the first time it went down....looks like we are still beating them up with people hitting up their site.....sooooo seeing the message of bandwidth being exceeded doesnt seem like too far of a stretch huh?? Thanks goes to PatH for bringing this up in chat the other week......

    http://iq.geek-tools.org/en/www/cbi.iq/1372972

    Great input thanks for taking the time to post

  2. if you cashed in a million at .85 and got $850,000 then you wanted to buy more it would cost you at least $850,000 to get a million back. Most likely more with the spreed...so why would you cash in and then buy more?????? :blink:

    Once they reach 12 mil BPD the currency will go up again. I believe if it comes out low at .86 it will go up to 3.00 +/- in the future.

  3. http://www.rferl.org/content/Iraqi_Politicians_To_Meet_On_New_Government/2213595.html

    Iraqi President Jalal Talabani (center), Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki (left), and Iyad Allawi meet in Irbil.

    Last updated (GMT/UTC): 08.11.2010 14:29

    Hopes for a breakthrough deal on a new Iraqi government have been tempered after talks between rival political factions broke up after 90 minutes without agreement.

    Leaders of Iraq's Kurdish, Shi'ite, and Sunni Muslim blocs met in the Kurdish regional capital of Irbil to try to broker a final deal on a national-unity government. The talks have been scheduled to continue on November 9 in Baghdad.

    Iraq now holds the world record for the longest time without a government since holding an election.

    Reports have suggested the rival political groups are close to reaching a power-sharing deal in which Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, a Shi'ite Muslim, would remain in office for a second term.

    But Al-Iraqiyah -- a Sunni-backed cross-sectarian alliance that won the most votes in the otherwise inconclusive March 7 parliamentary elections -- still needs to be brought into the deal.

    Political analysts say the head of Al-Iraqiyah, former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, must be convinced to join the deal if the next government is to have any chance of securing peace after more than seven years of sectarian violence.

    Maliki told the Iraqi politicians gathered at today's talks that any deal with Allawi would have to meet three main criteria to be successful.

    He listed them as "first, national unity that we need in order to face challenges; we also need to achieve national reconciliation to get rid of all sensitivities and differences; and third, we have to achieve the real national partnership in which we have commitments and rights."

    Allawi told Maliki that it was the details of what he called a "national partnership" that still must be agreed upon.

    "The main point in our view, in the view of the Al-Iraqiyah bloc, is that we have to define what a real national partnership means: one which creates equity, which is balanced, and which does not create any kind of distinction based on sect or affiliation to a certain region or ethnicity," Allawi said. "We should all be Iraqis in one country called the Great Iraq."

    U.S. officials fear excluding Al-Iraqiyah from power could ignite Sunni anger and reinvigorate a weakened but still lethal Sunni Islamist-led insurgency.

    U.S. Secretary of State Hillarious Clinton, speaking during a visit to Melbourne, Australia, today, urged Iraq's rival political factions to develop an inclusive power-sharing government.

    "It is fair to say we have been consistently urging the Iraqis to have an inclusive government that reflects the interest of the needs of the various segments of the population, that there had to be legitimate power sharing amongst different groups and individuals," Clinton said. "And that is what we hope at the end of this process -- and we hope we are near the end of it -- will be the result of all of their negotiations."

    Nevertheless, Clinton was cautious about predicting a breakthrough deal today that would satisfy Al-Iraqiyah. She warned that there have been many previous indications since the March election that an agreement was close at hand -- with factions coming close to forming a government and working out power-sharing arrangements, only to see the possibility of a deal collapse.

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