I've been watching that short report for a very lo
Post# of 75003
If you're flipping steadily it might matter. You're right about one thing, they eventually could get hurt badly as the price flies past their conditional order triggers and leave's them owing more than they can think about without puking.
Anyone, long term invested or not, can try their hand at shaking loose shares with gloom and doom tactics. Similar to what you were using on me to try and intimidate me into easing up on the deleting of BS soaked misinformation by telling me the SEC would be knocking on my door for lack of fairness. LMAO. You should've figured out by now it failed to work. I won't waste much more of our time time with it.
When you were first ranting to me the typos hadn't even occurred yet, only the announcement of the series A restructure.
There would have been absolutely no reason to do all that other work and delay the process. Not if scamming several million in lieu of years worth of 100's of millions which would begin to materialize just a few years later is what they had set out to accomplish. LSW Holdings has loads of capital from legitimate investments and isn't likely to switch to small time scamming at this point. That's like Warren Buffet switching to robbing liquor stores.
You're wrong however, about my "feathers" being "ruffled". Just shining the light on your BS was all. I know, it's hard to get away with scare tactics or general misinformation if you have serious investors using the board regularly who can spot BS the instant it hits the board and they're backed by mods who can as well and who have their backs. Of course the mods present a real special pain in the ass due to their ability to filter don't they. Oh well.
If it's obvious there's a team effort to shake loose shares, we'll fight back by filtering out the BS to keep the board honest and factual. That goes for folks over pumping the price for the near term as well. We'll normally inject some reality so newbies don't buy in 100% to total fluff and get burned when they jump in big at the top. Flip floppers like to manipulate the price in both directions depending on which way presents the path of least resistance.