gas prices are at an all time high.
do you try to ban Venezuelan gasoline? AND if you do, would you stop your ban if Hugo Chavez would sell his gas 25 cents less a gallon?
My mom has a boyfriend and he abuses when they have sex, but his excites me and i even fantasize of him controlling the both of us, but otherwise i find *** life disgusting. is this normal?
I love ******** and *** but i don’t like being involved as a gay, i kinda like to watch.
It seems like such a funny boast, because it’s so idiotic…
DOW under Bush 10,495-13,326
Dow under Clinton 3,371-11,497
S&P 500 B: 1240-1506
S&P 500 C: 443-1439
What these numbers tell are that Clinton didn’t have to have every day announced at an all time high because every day was…all the markets being at an all time high is that we haven’t completely gone in reverse…how hard a concept is that to understand
So I see this guy that knows me a little bit in school for one class.
He is leaving the school, and I don’t really talk to him much.
I just want a way to tell him that I think he’s really cute without being too awkward or anything.
How should I phrase it?
I wonder… since we started the current tax system in the U.S., are we in the top 10 of lowest tax rates or top 10 of highest tax rates?
Things were peachy under Bush on this subject, now it is the center of everything..
1 step forward, and now 20 steps back…
I’m reading Livermore and O’neil and the like who tout buying stocks at an all time high.
O’neil says, “if new high prices make the crowd timid about buying it, then that is likely the precise time to be buying the stock.”
Livermore is quoted saying, “Never sell a stock, because it seems high priced.. Conversely, never buy a stock, because it has a big decline from its previous high. The likelihood is that the decline is based on a very good reason.”
These two don’t make sense to me. Stock are priced based off of the crowd and what the crowd thinks the stock is worth. So.. if the crowd is weary at an all time high (and they sell their shares, which brings down the price of a stock), what makes the stock price go up.. is it future earnings that brings it back up?
More importantly (to me), if the crowd’s fear drops the price of a stock, why would it be a bad thing to buy a stock that has made a decline from its previous high like Livermore warned (since the decline is based off the crowd – which we think is irrational anyway). Why does Livermore say that the decline is most likely based on a very good reason?
Obviously there’s more to selecting a stock than to pick the ones with all time highs and to avoid the ones making a dip.. but these are just one of the pointers history’s “experts” tell us to look for. I’m merely questioning it.















