I am the SkunKhunter. I hunt down SkunK stocks. Those are stocks that have been beat down past any reasonable justification. I try to ride the stock up as market forces eventually right the ship of PPS. A SkunK is not a herd animal. He is a scavenger who knows that arriving before the herd means big profits and clean shoes. This is the journey of the GreenShift Corporation. Updated weekly between COB Friday and Sunday evening. (Disclaimers on Bottom of Site)
If Matthew took the position in 72 hours he has lost his shirt: "... may initiate a long position in GERS over the next 72 hours ..." (Mar 3, 2014 5:09 AM).
Only three outside experts are needed when you clearly have the facts stacked in your favor. My forst question to DVG and the ICM BOD is, "Why did you feel it necessary to indemnity all you clients if you felt that you were not infringing?"
Second question, "Mr Vander Greer, how could you not know about this technology when you were in fact the head researcher and you were running the company?"
Wow, didn't he know what is going on in his own organization?
I am getting the feeling that there is a finance deal to be announced. I would hope that they could pay down the Yagi toxicity and use the patents as collateral for cheaper money.
I wonder what the next positive ruling from the courts will be?
What did DVG really know? Did he lie in plain sight?
"Today, David VanderGriend is chief executive of Colwich-based ICM, North America's leading designer of ethanol plants. His brother Dennis is ICM's senior process engineer".
Motion denied.
ReplyDeleteOnly three dudes on GERS side. WOW, that is exciting.
ReplyDeletehttp://seekingalpha.com/instablog/20467391-matthew-finston/2720383-2-minute-case-for-greenshift-corp
ReplyDeleteIf Matthew took the position in 72 hours he has lost his shirt:
"... may initiate a long position in GERS over the next 72 hours ..." (Mar 3, 2014 5:09 AM).
Initiate
ReplyDeletehe has lost his shirt
Nobody initiated a position 11 years ago
He clearly lost your mind.
Only three outside experts are needed when you clearly have the facts stacked in your favor. My forst question to DVG and the ICM BOD is, "Why did you feel it necessary to indemnity all you clients if you felt that you were not infringing?"
ReplyDeleteSecond question, "Mr Vander Greer, how could you not know about this technology when you were in fact the head researcher and you were running the company?"
Wow, didn't he know what is going on in his own organization?
Ole Davy may need some truth serum!
ReplyDeleteI am getting the feeling that there is a finance deal to be announced. I would hope that they could pay down the Yagi toxicity and use the patents as collateral for cheaper money.
ReplyDeleteI wonder what the next positive ruling from the courts will be?
Who sings the song that goes "feelings nothing more then feelings"?
ReplyDeleteNobody " this time it's different"
ReplyDeleteFrom who is this quote?
Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.
$18'Gs& green
ReplyDeleteWhat did DVG really know? Did he lie in plain sight?
ReplyDelete"Today, David VanderGriend is chief executive of Colwich-based ICM, North America's leading designer of ethanol plants. His brother Dennis is ICM's senior process engineer".
Why would the engineer know anything about something he didn't engineer? The process was stolen.
ReplyDelete