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To: Jim McMannis who wrote (45043)11/16/1999 8:45:00 AM
From: IngotWeTrust  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116753
 
Mack, as the butt of many of your jokes and snide remarks for the last 6+ years on the internet, I will NOT extend one scintilla of my cocksure-ness about unlimited options open to any individual who possess both physical gold, gold id skills, and proper gold's exchange skillsets, post y2k.

You are one of the people I'm glad will be washed overboard in this Titanic dwarfing, engulfing miasma.

On second thought, maybe if I COULD explain it to you,
assuming for a nano-second you'd actually listen with an openmind,
MAYBE you'd stuff your pockets full of the yellow in some last minute show of "geting it" and sink to the bottom quicker as this ship of global commerce lists, rolls, and goes down with a "giant sucking sound."

Maybe I SHOULD revisit my abhorence of your feigned sincere interest...




To: Jim McMannis who wrote (45043)11/19/1999 8:42:00 AM
From: long-gone  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116753
 
Now, China gets uranium
Clinton approves transfer that could
help Beijing's weapons production

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

By Charles Smith
¸ 1999 WorldNetDaily.com

The Clinton administration has approved the shipment to Communist China of uranium U-235 -- the nuclear isotope used in the atomic bomb that was exploded over Hiroshima in 1945.
According to official statements from the Department of Energy and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, a public notice for the approval was published in the Federal Register Oct. 15. NRC spokesman Ron Hauber confirmed that the NRC approved the transfer after being "consulted" by the Department of Energy.

"This is a transfer of American U-235 previously sold to Germany," stated Hauber. "The Germans consulted with the Department of Energy and the NRC through EURATOM, the European atomic energy agency. The Germans requested permission to sell the U-235 to China. The NRC approved with no objection, but the actual transfer and oversight is the responsibility of the Department of Energy."

According to the public notice, the Department of Energy proposed the uranium be transferred as part of a "'subsequent arrangement' under the Agreement for Cooperation in the Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy Between the United States of America and the European Atomic Energy Community (EURATOM)." (cont)
worldnetdaily.com