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To: Carol S. who wrote (13875)4/30/1999 12:30:00 AM
From: Butch4327  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19109
 
Carol, it sounds to me like we're having a simple miscommunication. I am not trying to analyze WHY people have their opinions . . . I'm just saying that there are no transactions in this world when people value everything equally. Also, I am saying that people want to benefit from their transactions . . . therefore since everyone makes a value judgement and everyone wants to benefit, they must have made different value judgements, otherwise nobody would benefit. When people are manipulating a stock, they are doing the EXACT same thing, but they are trying to enhance their benefit. If they thought the stock were REALLY as valuable as they hype it to be and would continue to be that way, they would not sell . . . they'd hold it for those anticipated returns. The person who DOES buy it though when the manipulator sells though DOES believe (For whatever reason) that he will benefit in that manipulated price . . . therein lies the difference in value judgement. More power to the people that actually do their own research and don't fall for stuff like that . . . but they are not the only people who have opinions . . . they're the only people who have educated opinions. Regardless of what the value judgement is founded in, it is nonetheless a value judgement.

~Luc