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Barboza

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Everything posted by Barboza

  1. Asking questions is fine, ichris130! Perhaps you got confused about the zeros. My understanding - so far - is the following: IQD 1 = .00086 before lifting the zeros IQD 1 = .86 after lifting the zeros, but before RV Therefore, IQD 1,000,000 = $860,000 before RV. This is just my opnion. - Barboza
  2. The above comments are all very well balanced. I have a question to ask you all, just out of curiosity: In order to go from 0.00089 to 3.00 it is called a 300,000% gain... (and you label it as impossible). and what do you call when you go from 3.22 to 0.00089? (Could we apply the same measure?) Have you ever seen anything like that before?
  3. Hi, Bumper64! It is so nice seeing you back! I really miss interacting with you about our upcoming RV! Have a nice day! - Barboza
  4. Great post, Drox! I really appreciate your point of view. Once more you have given me plenty of reasons to agree with your assessments. Thank you! - Barboza
  5. Good job, Roadrunner! Thank you for sharing your e-mail with us. - Barboza
  6. Hi! If that has already happened, do you think Ali would still be selling dinars as usual?- Barboza
  7. Page 43? What are you talking about? If you have something to share... do it the right way!
  8. Prince Abubu, your concerns are legitimate ones, but there is one more point you should take into consideration. You wrote: "I personally hope that this RV happens. All indicators seem to lead to it, but I have yet to see anything that is concrete and not speculative." EVERY INVESTMENT in indeed SPECULATIVE! The concrete status will happen when your gain will allow you to cash in. Yes... we all have been waiting... and the Iraqi people included. But, the day is fast approaching... when you will have some concrete proof that your speculation was not in vain. Good luck... and be patient! If you don't trust your speculative investment... sell it! You will probably get most of your money back! - Barboza
  9. Scooter, Scooter, Scooter! You are like a bag full of surprises... always reinventing yourself! I really appreciate your contribution to all of us. Thank you, Scooter! - Barboza
  10. Thanks for posting it! This could become the best news ever! - Barboza
  11. Thanks, Adam, for posting this article. But, Adam, this article is from November 22, right? Don't you think some adjustments have been made to comply with the WTO requirements for immediate acceptance? Just wondering! - Barboza
  12. Great post, VIZIOIRAQI! Thank you for always searching and sharing with us! - Barboza
  13. Thanks, Ronscarpa, for posting Frank26's post. To be very honest, I really enjoyed every bit of it! It is a matter of following the yellow brick road, or just connecting the dots. It's coming... yes, RV is coming. Are we ready for it? - Barboza
  14. Thank you for posting BondLady's chat, tim5400! It is time for Iraq to become a SOVEREIGN-INDEPENDENT nation! But it seems to me like the GOI has learned too much from the American politicians... and want to drag their feet much longer. Perhaps Allawi would be changing factor to bring dignity to the people and restore the confidence among the nations. Go RV! - Barboza
  15. I do believe he meant RV and RI. RV was already explained. RI is reinstatement (getting that value it had before = $3.22). - Barboza
  16. Great points, labdog! It's a matter of time... a wonderful blessing.
  17. Kurdish guards fire on protest in Iraq, killing 2 Buzz up!599 votes ShareretweetEmailPrint AP – Iraqi riot police officers carry the body of a protester in front of the headquarters of Kurdish President … Slideshow:Iraq By YAHYA BARZANJI, Associated Press Yahya Barzanji, Associated Press – 2 hrs 30 mins ago SULAIMANIYAH, Iraq – Kurdish security guards opened fire Thursday on a crowd of protesters calling for political reforms in northern Iraq, killing at least two people, officials said, showing even war-weary Iraq cannot escape the unrest roiling the Middle East. Separately, a car bomb killed eight people and wounded 30 others in Muqdadiyah, 60 miles (90 kilometers) north of Baghdad, an official said. The area was once one of the strongholds of al-Qaida, and insurgents there stage frequent attacks despite improved security in much of the country. The demonstration in Sulaimaniyah was the most violent in a wave of protests that extended to the southern cities of Kut, Nasir and Basra. Iraq has seen small-scale demonstrations almost daily in recent weeks, mainly centered in the impoverished southern provinces and staged by Iraqis angry over a lack of basic services like electricity and clean drinking water. The hundreds of Kurdish protesters in the northern city of Sulaimaniyah, 160 miles (260 kilometers) northeast of Baghdad, Thursday, demanded political reforms from the regional government in the semiautonomous territory. Although Kurds generally enjoy a higher standard of living than the rest of Iraq, many are tired of the tight grip with which the ruling parties control the region and the economy. The protesters moved to the headquarters of Kurdish President Massoud Barzani's political party, where some demonstrators threw stones at the building. Kurdish security guards on the roof then opened fire, sending people fleeing for cover. A local police official and a hospital official said two people were killed, and the medical official said 47 people were injured. Both said the deaths and injuries were the result of shootings. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief the media. An Associated Press reporter saw one teenager shot in the head and being carried away by policemen on the street trying to help the protesters. In the southern city of Basra, about 600 people gathered in front of the provincial headquarters, facing off against police protecting the building. Witnesses said the protest was largely peaceful. "We are demanding that the Basra governor be fired because he has not done anything good for Basra," said Mohammed Ali Jasim, a 50-year-old father of nine at the protest in Iraq's second-largest city. Dozens of angry protesters also stormed the municipal building and set it on fire in the small town of Nasir, 170 miles (270 kilometers) south of Baghdad, said a police official in the provincial capital of Nasiriyah. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media. Five policemen were wounded after protesters hurled stones at the building and five protesters were arrested before a curfew was imposed, the officer said. Demonstrators in the southern city of Kut, 100 miles (160 kilometers) southeast of Baghdad, gathered for a second day in front of the governor's office, demanding his resignation over corruption allegations. The demonstrators decorated a donkey with a sign reading "governor" and began to hit the animal with their shoes — a grave insult in the Arab world. In Kirkuk, 180 miles (290 kilometers) north of Baghdad, more than 100 widows and orphans demonstrated near the governor's office, demanding aid. Iraq is one of the few countries with a democratically elected government in the Middle East, but Iraqis have a long list of grievances, including electricity that sometimes works only a few hours a day, unemployment that runs as high as 30 percent and rampant corruption. Security is also a top concern. Eight people died and 30 others were injured in a car bombing in Muqdadiyah in Diyala province, north of the capital, said the spokesman for the provincial health office, Faris al-Azawi. Iraqi leaders have sought to mute Iraqis' anger by granting concessions like cutting electricity tariffs and diverting money to buy jet fighters to food for the needy. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki vowed to serve only two terms, to distance himself from the authoritarian rulers dominating the rest of the region. Al-Maliki said policemen should not use force against protesters and said many of their demands were legitimate. But he said 20 people involved in the protests had been arrested and that rioters would not be tolerated. He accused remnants of the outlawed Baath Party that used to rule Iraq under Saddam Hussein, al-Qaida and people who did not do well in last year's elections with being behind the riots but provided no proof for his accusations. The prime minister often blames the Baath Party and al-Qaida for violence across the country. Meanwhile, a top ally of anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr was shot and killed by gunmen on his way home from the holy Shiite city of Karbala, said a member of the Karbala provincial council, Hussein Shadhan al-Aboudi. Sheik Jassim al-Mutairi used to deliver the Friday sermon in the Sadrist strongholds in eastern Baghdad and Kufa, 100 miles (160 kilometers) south of Baghdad. __ Associated Press staffers Sinan Salaheddin and Saad Abdul-Kadir in Baghdad, Nabil al-Jurani in Basra, Hadi Mizban in Kut and Sameer N. Yacoub in Amman, Jordan contributed to this report. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110217/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_iraq
  18. You have a legitimate right to vent your frustrations... but, the "Da La Rue machines" title to this post is somehow deceiving! It seems to contradict your last statement about being honest. Just keep your head on straight and do not listen to 'pumpers' and half fast intel. You will be able to survive like the rest of us! - Barboza
  19. Thank you, RVDinar4MyFamily, for your insight! I appreciate your sincere remarks, and hope and pray the Lord will bless you and your family. - Barboza
  20. Thanks, Ron. Great post! GOI and Maliki need to realize - and very soon - that any government is as good as the people have food on their tables. The Iraqi people have been very patient up till now, but the public display of discontent in the ME could be a catalyst to either a quick political end-game to resolve once and for all their social, political and financial equilibrium... or a possible display of increasing fireworks that may result in the dimissal of the present Prime Minister. Enough is enough, and no deadlines will prompt Maliki to recognize the people's best interest. They have noticed that deadlines do not work in a corrupt government! The window of opportunity may be closed if they do not act fast. Go RV! - Barboza
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