To: Alex who wrote (3762 ) 4/8/2003 9:41:25 PM From: inchingup Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50652 Alex: I told you to buy, buy, and buy more, before REFR runs out of cash to fund its company. Afterall, they have only pee'ed away about $42MM up to this point and last year had an income of a bit more than $200K. Not bad for a company who had no products for sale in 1990 and 2000 who had an income of almost $300K for those years. Just think how strong the company would have been financially if REFR insiders hadn't raped and pillaged investors funds for personal gain. I mean, they could have like another 3 to 5 years of cash left instead of just one. I always appreciated management of companies who thought it in the best interests to sell directly, and on the same day, into conference call and press releases. Certainly the moral respect for shareholders of these actions make them worthy of honor and praise. Of course, we should laud them for their share shuffling scheme with the offshore buddies at Ailouros whereby REFR sold them shares early in the year and then bought them back later on in the open market at a much higher price costing investors millions. This is most certainly a great way to build shareholder value. On top of that, we should never overlook the fact that everything at REFR and its licensees is proprietary. I know, because I called the scum at Inspectech to ask about the 5K airplane windows per month and got no answer from them. I also called and wrote several other of the licensees who gave similar responses. All the above are signs that would make me want to invest in a company. Low moral and ethical standards, sleazy and deceptive press releases meant to mislead, stock shuffling with an offshore entity, use of investors funds for personal gain through internal loans, and the funniest quote of all that SPD "goes from clear to dark and anywhere in between". Yep, I'd jump on the bandwagon now. This is such a deal. A dilapadated POS, with its fenders rusting out that blew its wad during the bubble of the late 90's and is hemmoraging cash with no visible sign of new financing in sight. Just think, if REFR takes in double what it did in revenues in 2003 that would allow it to survive for another whole month in 2004. Buy now, before the shares become unavailable as bankruptcy rears its ugly head.