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tamiflyer

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  1. Sorry for the confusion. Just a thought though. It was Britain who we broke off from and if I am not mistaken, the last true empire was by the British Empire. Money dominates all cultures, regardless of their beliefs, culture or what ever is on the drawing table, directly or behind the curtains. The wealthy families of the British Empire stayed in power because of money, which buys everything that one needs for power. Gold was the true money of the past and probably not all reported. What I am trying to say is that even though the world books which list the countries which have their gold reserves is out for public view, it does not necessarily accounts all the gold the countries possess. There has to be unaccounted tonnes of this precious metal to control the fluctuation of the gold markets and its true value. It is my firm believe that Britain has most of the world's gold today, which is still behind curtains and only heads of states or the similar know this. This leads to your statement in regards to Britain being involved in US policies in 1932. Well, he who has all of the gold controls the world. JMMHO. GLTY and Go RV.
  2. Thank you for your post. Even though I have not seen this video, I can only speculate that it deals or leads to the 1933 order to seize all the US gold from the average American citizen. Forgive me if I am wrong about this but I will take a chance that I am not. In regards to gold and most countries starting to hoard lots of it lately, It is my most humble opinion that we are on the verge of seeing history trying to repeat itself. (Impossible by the laws of physics) At any rate, new anomalies are on the playing field in today's timeline. We should be aware that mined gold will have a threshold line, in the not so distant future, that paper trails will follow to protect its true value. Let me explain! A newly found process which involves a bacterium and a very cheap derivative of gold called gold chloride, when processed together, can make pure gold nuggets up to 99.9% in purity. Wow! This would change the whole perspective as the way we view gold today. To give you an example, cubic zarconians took a huge chunk out of the diamond industry when they were first discovered. Now, Russia is able to replicate a perfect diamond in a lab for pennies on the dime, not even the Dollar. I read somewhere that China is now experimenting with the gold making process involving the bacterium process. Imagine if they can make tons of it and get rid of it just as fast? The assumption would be that the gold value would eventually plummet. The world powers would never allow this since they have used this precious metal to back up their own worth for millenniums. With this said, there would have to be an immense paper trail that undoubtedly proves that the gold was mined and not processed like ice-cream. Thanks for your post again and GLTY and all with the RV.
  3. 80 Billion Dollars and 30 long tonnes of gold at the CBI. Hmmmm! How about the 80 plus Billion Dollars from the IMF that belongs to Iraq, the Swizz bank accounts from the previous regime that have not been found yet that belongs to Iraq, the stolen fine art since the first liberation of Kuwait until today that belongs to Iraq, the hotels/resorts that the previous regime owned worldwide that belongs to Iraq, the undiscovered metals, precious stones that belongs to Iraq, and... Too much to list. When this thing hits, the whole world will wonder why this thing took so long. Thanks for your find and post. GLTY and all. Go RV.
  4. IMMHO, they have been at this for years now, implying that they will raise the dinar and so forth. However, they have raised it, pips by pips, to stabilize their fixed program rate. Just like they have kept the stability constant, they have kept investors, just like us, on a limbo rope, constant like if we flew by night, if you will. This is exactly what they want, to keep us in a destabilized mode to protect the real value of the Dinar. For those of us who are still hanging on, when that day comes, we will see the flowers flourish and the trees bare fruit. It makes too much sense that when they push the button, anyone who holds dinars will profit tremendously but it does not stop there. Real players will then get on the playing field and buy which will create something called implied volatility. These new players will push the price of the Dinar higher which will then appreciate in the CBI and probably get out of control for a short bit. This is where we come in, if we are smart enough to hold some when this day comes. In other words, those who started first, finish first. JMMHO. GLTA and go RV.
  5. Agreed. Gymrat. You mentioned that you had problems with the router for which they were going to charge you 160 plus dollars to reset for you, correct? A new laptop usually comes almost bare-bone which means, possibly in your case, only an operating system and a useless antivirus, which are installed inside. I would stay away from Norton, McAfee, any big ones, ect. I would try Avast, AVG or even Panda but not the cloud type. Some information is missing from you so I ask: 1. Is your laptop Windows based? Which operating system? eg. Windows 7, 8, linux ect. 2. Do you have an antivirus installed? 3. How are you on Dinarvets now? Via ethernet cable, using a router, internet cafe? Please explain. 4.
  6. Amen. Only through Jesus may we see the kingdom of heaven. Amen. This is not my site, however, as a user, I would like very much to see inspirational stories that deal with the works of our Savior. Thank you.
  7. All routers are basically the same. The only major differences that I could note on them would be (A little more advance) their heat sinks inside the devices and their encryption within their built in firewalls. Other than that, they all work basically identically. I might have left out some steps that I WOULD HAVE TAKEN, such as restarting the router also after it was all done and perhaps making sure the SSID was visible so I could see the BELKINS name when I am searching for a wireless network to connect to. GLTM and all on our endeavors and the RV.
  8. Hello. This is what I would do, however, at no time am I telling you what to do or suggesting anything. I'm just giving you information on what I WOULD DO, never what I recommend. With this in mind: I would go in to the router by plugging the ethernet cable that came with it. It is usually a reversed polarity cable and plug both, my laptop and my router to it, without the internet. Then I would type the IP address of the router on a web browser on my computer like explorer. This is usually 192.168.1.1 but it can vary. I would look in the back of the router for a sticker with this number. If it is not available, then I would type the MAC address from the router, just like a URL on my laptop. I would find either to work properly. Once I am in there, then there would be a user name/password boxes that usually are admin and admin. Once I would be in the settings of the router itself, I would look for a security tab and make sure that I set it to WAP2 or the similar and deffinitely, I would input a password that I would write down somewhere(Old school). Once I would save those numbers, then I would look for the authorized MAC units to be allowed to go through the router and then input these individually. If this would be complicated for me, I would google how to find the MAC address for each device I have. Once all of this is done, then I would unplug the cable and just plug the internet to the router, wait until it is fully loaded and then restart my computer. Once my computer is on, I would find a wireless device named Belkins or what ever I called it to be and try to connect. A box would open and I would input that password that I wrote (Old School) and wait. Walaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!!! I got internet now. Good luck to ME and all on the RV.
  9. I've been pondering on the true wealth of Iraq that is not being told by Iraq, even though there is much research being done locally and abroad. I'd like to open this up for discussion and start brainstorming some of the possibilities of assets so a list can be created and developed from there. Below is an old article that may point some of you in the right directions. Thank you and GLTA. Go RV. The search for Saddam's stash As fighting in Baghdad cools down, the hunt for the spoils heats up. How to find hidden assets. April 16, 2003: 4:58 PM EDT By Gordon T. Anderson, CNN/Money staff writer NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - It may take weeks or months to find out whether Saddam Hussein is dead. It will take years, even decades, to find his money. As the situation in Iraq moves into the post-war phase, the search for Saddam's money trail is accelerating. Having already identified and seized more than $1.6 billion in Iraqi assets just before the war began, Washington is preparing to go after more. Fates of fallen dictators "The world must find, freeze and return Iraqi money for the Iraqi people and their future," U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow said in a speech last month. How much is he talking about? Estimates vary widely -- from $6 billion, as Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage estimates, to $20 billion or more. Finding it won't be easy. Over the past three decades, experts say, the Iraqi regime established an intricate global apparatus to keep its finances well hidden. Indeed, many people involved in the asset-recovery business doubt that all the money can ever be identified, let alone recovered. It won't be for lack of trying. Here's how investigators will look for the money. Looking for legitimate companies The responsibility for finding the assets will fall to an international task force, still to be assembled. For now, there are active research units within the departments of Treasury and State, as well as the CIA. The British government also is looking. "One of the first things they want to do is find the corporations that Saddam owns," says Ed Pankau, a Texas-based private investigator. Pankau has worked on scores of asset-recovery projects, including ones involving Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega and deposed Ethiopian ruler Haile Selassie. "These people live in a world of their own, with an unlimited amount of wealth they have to put somewhere," Pankau says. In the case of Hussein, "he's going to own hotels, shopping centers, and real estate." Managing all the data is a key element of discovery. "You start with a look at overall sources of financing," says John Fawcett, of the New York law firm Kreindler & Kreindler. Fawcett is the co-author of an exhaustive report, "Sources of Revenue for Saddam and Sons," published last fall by the Coalition for International Justice, a human rights organization based in the Hague and Washington. The study documents a wide-ranging series of transactions, both legal and illegal. The regime imported hundreds of millions of dollars worth of steel from Egypt's Ginza Co., for example, and mechanical equipment from Technopromexport of Russia. It traded for $1.2 billion of wheat from Australia and nearly $500 million worth of rice from Vietnamese partners. It had relationships with some of the biggest banks in Europe. Special: Rebuilding Iraq See the special... Iraq's currency hodgepodge Baghdad building bonanza? Such transactions will be pored over for signs of profit-skimming, embezzlement, and money laundering. As investigators plow through the information, they start to notice patterns emerging. "Hundreds to thousands of names of individuals turn up," Fawcett says. Investigators then put them all into a database, looking for multiple references. "The people who keep showing up are invariably connected somehow," says Fawcett. "When you find them, you've narrowed your focus to do more in-depth individual searches." Past experience After the first Gulf War, the security firm Kroll Worldwide conducted a comprehensive survey of Saddam's assets on behalf of the Kuwaiti government. Kroll found numbered Swiss bank accounts, shell companies, and ownership stakes in a number of legitimate businesses. One of them: Hachette, a publishing arm of the French multinational Lagardere. The Iraqis own an 8 percent stake in the company, which publishes Elle, Car and Driver, and other magazines. (The shares have been frozen since 1991, under a U.N. sanction.) When Kroll conducts an investigation, according to managing director Peter Turecek, it culls through a vast array of news articles and independent reports. It's not all dry documents in musty government archives. "Profile articles are great, because they give little hints like 'Mr. So-and-so enjoys sailing on weekends,'" Turecek notes. "With that, we can go and check out boating sales records, and licenses, and docking reports." Like a jigsaw puzzle, much of the information interconnects, Turecek explains. "What business relationships does he have? Who are his corporate partners? Which financial institutions have been intermediaries in transactions?" Kroll's earlier study on Iraqi assets, for example, uncovered an international network of individuals and firms involved in laundering activities. They ranged from unwitting giants like Lagardere to active accomplices like a 12-person machine tool company in Ohio. Looking for bank accounts On the financial side, the hunt will involve a number of shadowy -- and not so shadowy -- global banking institutions. Rafidain Bank, a state-owned enterprise based in Baghdad, has for years been widely thought to be a centerpiece of Saddam's financial empire. The bank has branches in Jordan, Egypt, Lebanon, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates. Rafidain is a joint venture partner with some of Europe's leading financial institutions. It has ownership stakes, for example, in banks controlled by Britain's HSBC and France's Credit Lyonnais. (Both European partners have strenuously denied having working relationships with Rafidain, though Rafidain does hold board seats in each venture.) Just weeks before the war began, Rafidain boasted of its global finance capacity to a Bloomberg News reporter. "The UN is no problem," the bank's Beirut manager said. "You can transfer money from Beirut to Baghdad to any beneficiary if we have a telephone number or account." According to experts, the ability to move money freely from Baghdad to institutions outside of Iraq is what let the regime build and control its invisible empire of cash. Investigators say the regime routinely transferred cash through Rafidain and 17 privately owned banks within Iraq to intermediaries in such places as Jordan and Switzerland. To find evidence of those transactions, the U.S. will be "going through looking for records in the rubble," says Pankau. "Going through CIA files. Searching the trail of contacts and relationships stemming from any transaction that comes out of Iraq." It's likely they'll find records involving safe-haven banking systems, which operate on the periphery of international finance. Some -- like Labuan in Malaysia, or the island nation of Vanuatu � are not signatories to various treaties that compel open disclosure of criminality. Although agreements were reached in the 1990s to make asset recovery easier, the system remains difficult to negotiate. Eighteen years after Ferdinand Marcos was overthrown in the Philippines, for example, at least six Swiss banks still are holding deposits he'd made, even though they acknowledge the money is illicit. For aggressive recovery of assets to take place, "there has to be a regulatory mechanism in place, like a presidential order or a UN resolution," Fawcett says. "For example, a UN Sponsors of Terror list bars travel and financial interaction with countries and agents of countries on the list." When that happens, the U.S. government and the U.N. can muscle hesitating banks to cooperate by providing names, records, and data. "There's really quite a bit of pressure put upon banks to report suspicious activity. They face heavier and heavier sanctions," Fawcett said. "Financial police name countries in egregious violation of accepted standards in banking." Because it threatens the very ability of the safe havens to conduct business, according to Fawcett, the pressure to release records becomes intense. "Getting on the black list is not a pretty thing." http://money.cnn.com/2003/04/16/news/international/war_Saddams_Stash/index.htm
  10. Agreed! Keep it secret. Keep it safe. Just a little clitche' from "Lords of the Rings" but potentially very fruitful. Stay in touch.
  11. It's a deal. Imagine a round table with entities and their fields about metals, forex, trends, tech experts and so forth? Imagine getting all the inputs and making a sole decision on investments, as a whole, and reaping in the benefits for all? Sounds too good to be true but as you say it, it's very possible with the amount of gray matter we have here. Thanks and I look forward to this venture. GLTY and all. Go RV.
  12. Maginfico! Proposition- When this RV hits, I would like to exchange thoughts with you in regards to wealth management and take it from there. What say you? Thanks.
  13. Bravo! Nice read Austrian Machine. GLTY and Go RV
  14. Texas May Start Hoarding Gold…Secession Next? We all know the cliché: ‘Don’t mess with Texas.’ Well, a new piece of legislation is being proposed to send that message to Washington, when it comes to protecting Texas’ gold. A lawmaker has proposed a bill to create a Texas Bullion Depository, which would allow the state and its citizens to store gold bullion in its own facility in Texas, with the protection of the state. If passed, the Texas bill would tell Washington to “shove off” under the 10th amendment power given the states, if we ever saw the kind of currency craziness we saw during the Great Depression when President Franklin D. Roosevelt mandated citizens hand over most of their gold. Texas isn't the first state to think about hedging its monetary destiny with precious metals. Related: Don't Sell Your Gold and Silver Coins: Jim Rogers Citing concerns over the value of the U.S. dollar, Arizona lawmakers are the latest to pursue legislation that would declare privately minted gold and silver coins legal tender. In 2011, Utah became the first state in the country to legalize these precious metal coins as currency. Lawmakers in states including Minnesota, North Carolina, Idaho, South Carolina, and Colorado have debated similar laws. As for the Texas proposal, Jim Rickards, senior managing director of Tangent Capital Partners and author of Currency Wars, tells The Daily Ticker you can think of it like the “Fort Knox of Texas.” And on the legal side Rickards says, “you’ve got the state of Texas standing up for you if the federal government tries to do what they tried to do in 1933, which is take the people’s gold." Rickards is also a lawyer and has read the legislation. Related: Central Banks Repatriate Gold: How Will This Affect Investors? So, is Texas making preparations to start hoarding gold? “It may end up that way,” Rickards says. “Personally, I think this is a game changer in terms of the way institutional investors are going to look at gold.” That’s because large Texas pension funds haven’t been allowed to invest in physical gold, but Rickards explains this law would change that. Gold is considered a hedge against inflation. And while inflation is currently low in the U.S. right now by official figures, Rickards doesn’t expect that to remain the case, projecting an uptick to come later this year or early next year. Related: The Uptrend in Gold Is Broken, Next Stop Could Be $1000: Don Hays If people were to lose faith in the dollar, Rickards concedes Texas could have the foundation for its own currency, of sorts. Which could come in handy if they, say, push forward in trying to secede. You may recall, more than 100,000 people signed an online petition calling on the Obama administration to allow Texas to secede from the U.S., according to New York Times. In January, the White House declined but the secession movement has pressed on. http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-ticker/texas-may-start-hoarding-gold-secession-next-192407075.html
  15. Arizona Gold, Silver Currency Bill Advances As Lawmakers Clamor For Alternative Legal Tender AP | By By CRISTINA SILVA PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona lawmakers say the global economy is on the precipice of financial ruin and the U.S. dollar could soon be worth less than the paper used to make it. These doomsayers are pushing forward legislation that would declare privately minted gold and silver coins legal tender, no different under state law than the U.S. dollar printed by the federal Department of Treasury. The measure is Arizona's latest jab at the federal government, which prohibits states from minting their own money. It also reflects a growing distrust of government-backed money. "The public sees the value in it," said Republican Rep. Steve Smith, of Maricopa. "This is the type of currency we have had over the history of mankind." The bill, which advanced in a 4-2 vote by a House committee Monday, states that gold and silver should be legal currency not subject to tax or regulation as property. The Republican-led Senate gave the bill its blessing in February in a 17-11 partisan vote. The bill would let people use the precious metals as money as long as businesses agree to take them. If made law, it would take effect in 2014. Democrats oppose the measure. They say it would be a bureaucratic nightmare because businesses don't have the equipment to determine the value of gold and silver. "This should be addressed by the Federal Reserve and not by the state," said Democratic Rep. Rosanna Gabaldon, of Green Valley. Keith Weiner, president of the Gold Standard Institute, which supports gold-backed currencies, said he envisions a system where people can pay for goods and services with debit and credit cards backed by gold and silver. Paper money is a "recipe for worldwide bankruptcy," Weiner told Arizona lawmakers Monday. "Everybody is going bankrupt on this system so we need a sound and honest money system, such as gold and silver." In 2011, Utah became the first state in the country to legalize gold and silver coins as currency. Lawmakers in Minnesota, North Carolina, Idaho, South Carolina, Colorado and other states have debated similar laws in recent years. Many investors have invested their money in precious metals in recent years as a hedge against the declining value of the dollar. When the value of the dollar declines, gold prices rise. Gold rose $12, nearly 1 percent, to $1,604.60 per ounce on Monday with news of Europe's bailout plan for cash-strapped Cyprus. Silver inched slightly higher, up 2.3 cents to $28.874 per ounce. The dollar was up against the euro, the currency used by 17 European countries, as well as the Japanese yen and the Canadian dollar in February. Proponents of the switch to gold and silver argue paper money is too vulnerable to government manipulations. When central banks boost the amount of currency in circulation to drive down interest rates, the value of that currency relative to others can decline. "It's actually strange to me that we don't have this already," said Republican Rep. David Livingston, of Peoria. Gold-backed money fell out of favor during World War I because the U.S. and many other countries needed to print more cash to pay for the war. In 1971, President Richard Nixon formally abandoned the gold standard. ___ Cristina Silva can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/cristymsilva . http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/18/arizona-gold-silver-currency_n_2903742.html
  16. That is approximately 70:1 Wow! This is more of a police state than anything. This does not include the army, which also roams the streets. In the US, we have approximately 1000:1 When Iraq police numbers diminish, then we might see some stability there. Thank you for your post. JMMHO. GLTA. GO RV!
  17. Venezuela to unveil new forex system details on Tuesday CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuela will launch a new "complementary" system to bolster the official foreign exchange system, and full details will be given on Tuesday, acting President Nicolas Maduro said. The government has been promising more economic measures to improve the supply of dollars within a system of strict currency controls introduced by the late socialist leader Hugo Chavez. In televised comments, Maduro said Venezuela's financial system had enough dollars to feed demand, and that the new arrangement would support the existing CADIVI currency board. "From this week, Venezuelans who need foreign exchange in special conditions are going to have a complementary system to CADIVI," the acting president said. "The specific details of how it is going to work will be fully explained tomorrow." Before Chavez died, interim leader Maduro began implementing various economic measures, including a devaluation of the bolivar currency and a change to the oil windfall tax structure. Economists had been widely predicting the government would create a new system through which people and businesses could access U.S. dollars, beyond the CADIVI board which sells a restricted amount at a price of 6.3 bolivars to the greenback. "We have directed (Finance Minister) Jorge Giordani, working with the central bank, to make sure the dividends needed by the complementary system are in place by next Monday," Maduro said. As well as improving the supply of dollars, the government says the system will help combat black market currency trading. Local newspapers have reported that the new system will operate via direct sales of dollars from oil revenue, as opposed to a previous secondary mechanism, known as Sitme, which was based on bond transactions. "It'll be much better than Sitme. Quicker, more efficient," Maduro said on Monday. Venezuela devalued its currency by 32 percent last month in the fifth such move in a decade under Chavez's rule. His interim replacement, Maduro, is running for election on April 14. Businesses have for years complained about restrictions on access to foreign currency, while the government says it is obliged to maintain controls to counter speculative trading. (Reporting by Daniel Wallis; Editing by Paul Simao) http://news.yahoo.com/venezuela-launch-complementary-foreign-exchange-system-maduro-013008612.html Mods. Can you please move to off topics. Sticky fingers. Thanks.
  18. This sounds more like a 10:1 JMO here. So 10k dollars as severance pay??? Most Iraqi's in that position would take it which would improve the economy 9 times ahead of schedule. More spending, more importing and probably, for the selected few, more investing for exporting. This is if they would RV at 10:1 I frankly don't see this statement to correlate with the 1:1 goal they have in mind. If the source of this article is legitimate and not just smoke/mirrors, then let's see if I was right on my minute analogy. Thank you for your post. JMMHO. Go RV!
  19. If this is true, it's a step in the right direction, however, too many variables that are still missing for Iraq to become a nation-state. On paper, Iraq is only a state but lacks the qualities of a nation. The way that I see it, Baghdad and the Kurdistan region lean more towards regionalism than anything. They all want their own thing and are not willing to compromise. There are 5 things, as a minimum, that must be present for Iraq (As a whole) to become great with progress and a foreseeable future. 1. Common Language- Close but not quite. 2. Common Religion- Won't happen in a million years 3. Sovereignty- The Perimeter of Iraq is almost there if Kuwait and Iraq agree on the outer boundaries, however, inner boundaries are the big problem here with 3 independent regions with independent armies. 4. Common political ideology- Their constitution and their political affiliations clash everyday between the department heads and for the simplest of things. This is a power struggle that will take many generations to either accept or overcome and I don't see any fruits in the near future. 5. Unity (The will of the people to live together)- The most important of all! Fighting is their number 1 priority amongst themselves so Iraq is not unified and the people do not have the will to live together yet. Three out of two would definitely help Iraq to truly have independence within and allow the leaders to move forward into prosperity. Until Iraq gets there, not even all the oil and gold and the rest of the untold riches will Iraq be a power player in the region. As to the RV, they have the necessary backing to do it when ever they choose but for investors and power players to actually become part of the chess game, stability and a standard routine must prevail. This is just my opinion on the above story. Thank you for reading and may we have an RV soon. Go RV!
  20. Thank you for bringing this to light. Please do not forget the Spaniards. The US, Britain and Spain were at the forefront of the liberation, dubbed IQF (Iraqi Freedom.) It was never an invasion but a liberation! What I can tell you firsthand is that the war actually started on the 19th and not the 20th, like CNN likes to claim!. So actually the 18th should make the 10 year anniversary. Remember, Zulu time and not time back in the US. Anyway, thank you for your post and I personally appreciate your comments. God bless America and all the countries which helped take that first step to bring freedom to a country which was in harm's way with freedom, with all its undiscovered riches, with an oppressed civilization by a totalitarian dictatorship and hopefully should bring fruits back to the cradle, to the beginning, to the people of Iraq. I feel very proud and honored to have participated with just a fraction of the whole. Thank you again. Go RV!!!
  21. "She explained that Iraq needs to restructure its currency, as there is no class more than 25 thousand dinars, as well as coins, (High and low) which confirms that the current currency does not fit with the Iraqi state revenues, which have significant financial budgets " Let's think about this for a few!!! Thank you all and I am back!!!
  22. Media 'blackout' as Bush speaks in Cayman Islands GEORGE TOWN, Cayman Islands (AP) — Organizers of an investment conference in the Cayman Islands say they have been forbidden from disclosing any details about a speech by former President George W. Bush in the offshore financial haven, an event spokesman said Thursday. The keynote speech by the former president is "totally closed to all journalists," and conference organizers are forbidden from discussing any aspect of it even in general terms, spokesman Dan Kneipp said. "We've got a complete blackout on discussing the Bush details," Kneipp told The Associated Press. The restrictions were imposed by the former president's staff, he said. Bush was scheduled to speak Thursday evening at The Ritz-Carlton on Grand Cayman Island. "It's totally their decision," Kneipp said of the decision to close the event to the media. Sponsors of the two-day conference include KPMG, a company that provides tax advisory services, and Deutsche Bank. It costs $4,000 to attend and other speakers include billionaire Richard Branson. Cayman Islands officials are proud of the British territory's role as an offshore finance center. But members of the U.S. Congress and advocates for changes in tax laws have accused corporations and wealthy individuals of using so-called financial havens to improperly avoid taxes. http://news.yahoo.com/media-blackout-bush-speaks-cayman-islands-204640389--finance.html
  23. Hello folks. I've been away for a while since no real issues about the Dinar have surfaced yet, yet I've said. All in due time! Regarding the issue of Pacquiao and Bradley, IMMHO, Pacman won the fight! According to the score cards from the judges, he failed to win. According to ESPN and the reviewed video, Pacman had 34% vs 19% of landed punches! Hello! Numbers never lie, unless they are manipulated, not Manny Pulated!!! I saw the fight and clearly, Manny won! GLTA and Go RV soon. Just my two Fils.
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