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  1. #26881
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    Cool Chase Banks Profit end for the Exchange.

    Quote Originally Posted by jerseydinar View Post
    i am 100% positive that I gave her 150.00 USD and I ordered 200,000 dinar. My receipt says 200,000 dinar and the rate of .0078250 which comes out to 1333.33 or am I doing my math wrong. This was my first purchase from a bank.Am I figuring out the rate wrong?1333.33x150.00=199,999.50-am I right in thinking this way?If so GO RV
    For now it is around 1% ither way, (buy or sell) as SGS said like with forex site's. Before for $150.00 I would get more than that. Like 1385, so it is getting better by getting less. It is all Good Thow

  2. #26882
    Senior Investor shotgunsusie's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jerseydinar View Post
    ok guys-here is the latest info on our dinar investment in NJ-on Friday 11/24 we purchased another 200,000 dinar for 150.00 UDS at a chase branch in Kearny, NJ. The rate was 1334!!!!! or .0078250. they charged a 15.00 service charge and I had to open an acct with them but she said I would have them in 2 business days.so by Mon or Tues she will call me to pick them up.She asked if I was going to Iraq and I said no I'm just an investor.She asked a few questions and was intrigued by the whole situation. She was shocked at the rate I was buying it for and it's potential. She's going to check into it herself now. will follow up when I pick them up soon.juust thought I'd share-GO RV
    they paid 1441 for the dinar, they charged you 1334, they made 107 dinar off your transaction PER DOLLAR. 16050 dinar is what you paid to buy those dinar you just got. thats what the 'spread' is all about. its the way the banks make money from doing business with investors.
    JULY STILL AINT NO LIE!!!

    franny, were almost there!!

  3. #26883
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    Quote Originally Posted by neno View Post
    For now it is around 1% ither way, (buy or sell) as SGS said like with forex site's. Before for $150.00 I would get more than that. Like 1385, so it is getting better by getting less. It is all Good Thow
    Thanks Neno that's what I thought

  4. #26884
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    Question

    Quote Originally Posted by CharmedPiper View Post
    Office of the Iraq Programme
    Oil-for-Food
    Français

    25 November 2006

    UN Office of the Iraq Program - Oil for Food: About the Program

    Weekly Oil Exports
    The following reports track oil sales through 20 March 2003. Oil exports under the Programme were suspended with the onset of war on that date. Security Council resolution 1483 (22 May 2003) lifted civilian sanctions on Iraq and called for the termination of the Oil-for-Food Programme within six months (21 November 2003). The resolution also provides that all proceeds from exports after 22 May be deposited in the Development Fund for Iraq, under the administration of the Coalition Provisional Authority "until such time as an internationally recognized, representative government of Iraq is properly constituted:"

    CHECK THIS OUT....COINCIDENCE, I THINK NOT. LOOK AT THE DATE AT THE TOP, THEN LOOK AT THE REFERENCES BELOW.

    Phase XIII 30 November - 6 December 2002 (See also two rows below)
    Average rate of oil lifted (millions of barrels per day) 1.47
    5 - 6 December 2002 (under phase XIII) 1.00


    Does this mean anything????
    Do you find that certain words and numbers just POP out of no where???

    Like every day that I look through the news paper SOMETHING seems to scream out at me...like "November to Remember" or "VIII" or "147"...Heck, going to the grocery store makes me CRAZY with all the numbers! "On Sale - $1.60 off..."

    Point is...if I'm affected like this...oh-boy! POOR PIPER!

    Just having a bit of fun...just wanted to know if it's just me...

    Tiff

  5. #26885
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    Talking Just Goes To Show...

    Quote Originally Posted by shotgunsusie View Post
    They paid 1441 for the dinar, they charged you 1334 & they made 107 dinar off your transaction PER DOLLAR. 16050 dinar is what you paid to buy those dinar you just got. That's what the 'spread' is all about. It's the way the banks make money from doing business with investors.
    This is so much bigger than we could ever possibly imagine & proves an old saying - "Just Follow THE MONEY". In our case - BANKS.

    Can I Get An AMEN?

  6. #26886
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    the violence is caused by the RELIGION of hate. plain and simple.
    The news media reports can accurate but at the same time biased. example
    Is the glass half full or half empty !

  7. #26887
    Investor Alphamystic's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by CharmedPiper View Post
    Here is another factual coincidence.....this is from November 2003

    November 2003

    The government has declared Eid holidays from November 26 to 29, and paid
    advanced salaries to its employees for enabling them to meet their Eid expenses.

    November 26th is tomorrow.....
    November 29th is when there is the Bush, Maliki, Blair meeting.
    Ironically, their Eid gifts were paid in 2003....November 26-29 th.

    I just love this coincidental stuff.....hoping for a reval tomorrow!!!
    CP - You are da man!.... er, wait....well you know what I mean
    “Don't be distracted by criticism. The only taste of success some people have, is when they take a bite out of you.”

    Got woOOot?

  8. #26888
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    Thumbs down Main Stream Media...

    Quote Originally Posted by bigred52 View Post
    The violence is caused by the RELIGION of hate, plain and simple. The news media can report accurately, but at the same time biased. Example: Is the glass half full, or half empty?
    They are not to be trusted. There are many on this forum (SGS, Adster, Charmed Piper, etc...), that are far superior in truth/facts than the BOZOS in the MSM could ever hope to be.

    Myself? I have a BRAIN, just like you. We can definitely ascertain what is factual & what is not.

    I DO NOT NEED THE MSM TO TELL ME WHAT TO THINK EITHER! I absolutely abhor them...

    NOW - Let's watch the IQD considerably rise in value!!!

  9. #26889
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    Red face Let's hope this all holds together until the R/V

    BAGHDAD, Iraq (Nov. 25) -- Iraq's Shiite prime minister, struggling to prevent sectarian violence from sending Iraq into full-fledged civil war, is facing strong criticism from top Shiite and Sunni Arab leaders alike as he prepares for a summit with President Bush next week.

    On Saturday, a prominent Sunni religious leader warned that Iraq's escalating sectarian violence will spread throughout the Middle East unless the international community withdraws support for Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government.

    "I call on the Arab states, the Arab League and the United Nations to stop this government and withdraw its support from it. Otherwise, the disaster will occur and the turmoil will happen in Iraq and other countries," said Sheik Harith al-Dhari, who heads the Association of Muslim Scholars.

    Last week, Iraq's Interior Ministry issued an arrest warrant against al-Dhari, saying he was wanted for inciting violence and terrorism.

    On the other side of Iraq's sectarian divide, Shiite politicians loyal to the radical anti-American Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr have threatened to boycott parliament and the Cabinet if al-Maliki goes ahead with the planned summit in Jordan on Wednesday and Thursday. The political bloc, known as Sadrists, is a mainstay of support for al-Maliki.

    The White House has said the meeting is still on.

    Iran, the top U.S. rival in the region, had planned its own summit Saturday, inviting the presidents of Iraq and Syria in what was seen as a bid to assert its role as a powerbroker in Iraq. Syria did not respond, perhaps to avoid annoying the U.S., and Iraq's president said he could not get to Iran before Sunday at the earliest because Baghdad's airport was closed to commercial flights following a deadly attack Thursday in Sadr City. Smart move, blame it on the airport. Then you don't have to choose sides or offend anyone in the neighborhood

    Suspected Sunni insurgents killed 215 people in the Shiite slum with mortars and five car bombs in the deadliest single attack of the war. On Saturday, Sadrist lawmaker Qusai Abdul-Wahab blamed U.S. forces for the attack, saying they failed to provide security.

    As Vice President Dick Cheney traveled to the neighboring Sunni country of Saudi Arabia on Saturday to seek help in calming Iraq, Iraq's sectarian violence shifted to Diyala province north of Baghdad, where gunmen broke into two Shiite homes and killed 21 men in front of their relatives, police said. U.S. and Iraqi forces also killed 58 insurgents during fighting in the same region.

    In central Iraq, a suicide car bomber attacked a checkpoint near Fallujah, killing three Iraqi civilians and a U.S. service member, and wounding nine civilians and an American service member, the coalition said. The dead included two Iraqi children and an adult.

    A U.S. Marine also died from wounds sustained while fighting in Anbar province on Friday, the military said, raising to at least 2,874 the number of U.S. servicemen who have died since the war began in 2003. So far, 54 American service members have died this month in Iraq.
    Six people were killed in other violence in Iraq on Saturday, and 19 bodies were found, police said.

    Iraq's government has been unable to prevent revenge attacks by Shiite militias and Sunni Arab insurgents, despite the 24-hour curfew it imposed Thursday night on Baghdad's 6 million residents. After only scattered violence occurred in Baghdad on Saturday, the government announced it would allow residents to leave their homes Sunday but keep the ban on all vehicles for another day.

    In Diyala province, a hotbed of Iraq's Sunni-Arab insurgency, gunmen raided the two Shiite homes late Friday, police said. The attack targeted members of the al-Sawed Shiite tribe in the village of Balad Ruz, 45 miles northeast of Baghdad, according to a police officer who spoke on condition of anonymity to protect his own security, as officials often do in the volatile province.

    The gunmen broke into the both houses as their large extended families slept, marched everyone outside, lined up the 21 men and shot them to death as the women and children watched, police said.

    Police could not reach the remote village to collect the bodies and take them to a morgue until Saturday, police said, adding that they do not known whether the attack was motivated by sectarian hatred or a tribal dispute.

    In other parts of Diyala, a largely rural area of farms and orchards, police killed 36 insurgents and wounded dozens of others in clashes Saturday, police said. U.S. and Iraqi forces also conducted several raids north of Baghdad, killing 22 insurgents and a civilian, and destroying a factory used to make roadside bombs, the military said.

    Baghdad was quieter than it had been on Friday, when rampaging militiamen burned and blew up four mosques and torched several homes in the mostly Shiite neighborhood of Hurriyah, witnesses and police said. Iraqi soldiers at a nearby army post failed to intervene in the assault by suspected members of the Shiite Mahdi Army militia or subsequent attacks that killed as many as 25 Sunnis, said police Capt. Jamil Hussein.

    The U.S. military said Saturday that Iraqi soldiers securing Hurriyah found only one burned mosque and were unable to confirm residents' and police accounts that six Sunni Arabs were dragged from Friday prayers and burned to death.

    On Friday, al-Sadr, the anti-American Shiite cleric, urged al-Dhari, the Sunni leader, to issue a religious edict condemning Sunni attacks on Shiites.

    In an apparent response, Al-Dhari said during his news conference in Cairo, Egypt, that his Association of Muslim Scholars has repeatedly condemned the killing of Iraqi Muslims and attacks on their homes and mosques.

    Al-Dhari, an outspoken critic of the government and the U.S. occupation, alleged that the Shiite-led government was using the 24-hour curfew as a way to carry out attacks against Sunnis, but he urged Iraqis not to be lured into more violence. good call

    "Be patient and practice steadfastness and don't be lured into this sedition that aims to destroy" Iraq, he said.

    In Baghdad, Ali al-Adib, a Shiite lawmaker close to al-Maliki, dismissed al-Dhari as a radical with few supporters. "If he doesn't want this elected national unity government what does he want, a return to dictatorship?" al-Adib said in an interview.

    AP correspondents Bassem Mroue and Qais Al-Bashir contributed to this report from Baghdad, and correspondent Omar Sinan from Cairo, Egypt.


    11/25/06 17:47 EST

  10. #26890
    Senior Investor Offshore-Wealth.com's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ozizoz View Post
    This is not a civil war in Iraq . .. its a two thousand year old turf fight. Why do they fight? Because they dont have squat! Give the people of Iraq a taste of a better life with all the luxuries we take advantage like reliable electricity, CLEAN running water, food . . .and some money in the bank for a better future and you'll see all this fighting fade away.

    When people have nothing to lose, why not blow yourself up and a few of the "enemies" with you??? When you're at the bottom of life, even the carrot of 72 virgins looks better than a woman who has a longer beard than you do.

    Show them the money . . .and watch Iraq slowly turn into suburbia
    Exactly,

    War is almost always about power, and money equals power. If there were no dirt poor in the world, we would all be far better off than we are. Almost all violent actions revolve around wealth, and if everyone was other than poor, no doubt the majority of violence would end.

    What really bothers me is the savage revenge of torture killings, anyone who is involved in these killings should be eliminated. The latest burning alive is about as low as it can go in my opinion. How any human being can torture a person to death is beyond human and should be delt with with the most sever punishment when caught.

    As was pointed out, the history of shiites and sunies is where all this hatred dates back thousands of years. End poverty, and you end the majority of these killings, it is as simple as that. The Kurd's have several sects living in harmony in their region, so if the can do it as the minority sect, then surely the savages of shiite and suni sects can do the same. Revalue is only answer to this violent dilemma in my opinion.

    Good luck to all, Mike

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