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To: nicewatch who wrote (23706)3/29/2005 3:27:51 PM
From: Bucky Katt  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 48463
 
My tank-top is still working, a note from the 23rd>

Seems to me they are attempting to mitigate the FED rate damage by taking oil down, as they did yesterday before the rate hike. And now look at the 'wonderful' inventory numbers out this morn.

Late last year I developed a rt algorithm that takes 2 crude futures contracts, spot crude, the yield on the 10 year T bill, and also factors in numbers on the djia, naz comp & sp500, gives me an over/under-buy/sell factor and it has worked like a charm the past 5 months...
I hope it continues to help me see thru the bs.

Like yesterday right before the FED hike, I smelled rotten fish>

Message 21158334
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The same thing has been happening in the crude futures from time to time. (current month volitility)
Not sure what it all means, but this IS the current sitrep.
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Btw, today is a famous date in history>

The Battle of Towton in the Wars of the Roses was the bloodiest ever fought on British soil, with casualties believed to have been in excess of 20,000 (perhaps as many as 30,000) men. The battle took place on a snowy 29 March 1461 (Palm Sunday) on a plateau between the villages of Towton and Saxton in Yorkshire (about 12 miles southwest of York and about 2 miles south of Tadcaster).

Part of the reason so many died is perhaps because in the parley before the battle both sides agreed that no quarter would be given or asked, as they hoped to end it there and then.

At this point in the civil war, the Lancastrians were on equal terms with the Yorkists, having eliminated Richard, Duke of York and Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury from the scene at the Battle of Wakefield, and been victorious at the Second Battle of St Albans. However, Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, "the Kingmaker", controlled London and had proclaimed the eldest of York's sons as King Edward IV of England. It was Edward himself who decided to take the initiative and march north in the hope of inflicting a final defeat on his rival, King Henry VI of England. Henry, a pious and peace-loving man, and by many reports mentally feeble, took no part in any military decisions, but allowed his queen, Margaret of Anjou, complete freedom to employ her battle commanders, chief of whom was Henry Beaufort the Duke of Somerset, on his behalf.

It is thought that 50,000, or perhaps even 100,000 men fought, including 28 Lords (almost half the peerage), mainly on the Lancastrian side. The numbers often given are 42,000 for the Lancastrians and 36,000 for the Yorkists. This is one of the few battles in English history, perhaps the only, where the fighting was so violent that the front lines were frequently forced to stop and remove the bodies to be able to get at each other.