Mr. Cohen,
<<Jerard, you are truly unique in your use of fancy phrases and words, metaphors and analogies...Unlike yourself; the eternal optimist, Im wondering if you and others on this thread are missing something?>>
Every spring, no matter what terrible things happened last season, farmers, the true eternal optimists, are in their fields with seeds, fertilizer and hope that with this season comes the bumper crop. So interpolating your meaning am I to think you would do away with all the farmers and their hopeless seed spreading foolish fantasies?
Regarding my phancy frases, words and metaphors (I eschew analogies and similes), sometimes I post only to go on the public record as my meaning, to most, only will become clear in hindsight. Aldous Huxley postulated that the brain evolved as tool for analysis and prediction. I have made public predictions. Kindly bookmark my optimistically offending posting and pie my foolish red face with my own cream-puffed-up words and phrases this August should I be wrong.
<<Is the stock's action, or lack thereof, a sign that all is not so well at Naxos?>>
"Don't let that yellow line crawl up your back," as my old paratroop instructor used to yell at us every morning before a jump. Sliding stock prices on no news and low volume should not be any more alarming than very good news followed by lower prices has been in the past. It's the paradox of Naxos. What else can I say?
Jerard P |