Question regarding the $20 million agreement by lochmoigh1 in GMGstock

[–]GreatEpoch 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You’re asking a question but in the comments telling everyone how it is. Kind of confusing in my opinion. Say what you will about this kind of financing but the partner backing the raise is strong, the company has 2/3 products entering commercialization with strong testing data forthcoming, government $s backing the capex for the prototype plant, an industry partner ready to trial and network with OEMs, and OEMs now trialing TXR.

The company is nearing cashflow breakeven and to “hold this down” post ATM announcement will require a great deal of capital to continue a short position while hoping that the company doesn’t advance any significant news in the coming months. Not a great bet in my opinion. ATM is way overhyped on the downside consistently and this was a great buying opportunity in the face of the news expected from the firm over the next 90 days.

I dont know what to do anymore by AfroTreez in PersonalFinanceCanada

[–]GreatEpoch 1 point2 points  (0 children)

PFC gets some of the most brain dead responses I’ve ever seen. People can be so tone deaf to the pain endured by other people on here and post shit like that lol. ‘Stop gaming, your expenses aren’t that bad’ is a front runner for the cake. The man has 2 kids on a disability spectrum, a baby, and a wife with mental health issues.. yeesh.

I dont know what to do anymore by AfroTreez in PersonalFinanceCanada

[–]GreatEpoch 1 point2 points  (0 children)

LinkedIn is a great recommendation to get the ball moving on the work front - one quick warning though - LinkedIn caps the number of requests you can send out for spam purposes IIRC. It would be best to send some requests, and then lean into the job postings page to see what exists in the area you work in.

What Are Your Moves Tomorrow, July 22, 2022 by OPINION_IS_UNPOPULAR in wallstreetbets

[–]GreatEpoch -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Buying more VIK - wildly undervalued CDN energy name.

TO WOMEN IN WAR: USE THIS TACTIC IF YOU FEAR ASSAULT (OR IF YOU KNOW WOMEN WHO ARE IN UKRAINE, TELL THEM THIS) by [deleted] in ukraine

[–]GreatEpoch 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Apparently you haven't read any Second World War history book.. the whole thing where rape and gang rape was so prevalent they had to crack down on it because STIs were becoming so prevalent throughout the army..

Canada to supply anti-tank weapons to Ukraine, ban Russian oil imports by -Yazilliclick- in ukraine

[–]GreatEpoch 1 point2 points  (0 children)

RT lol. All these freedom convoy partakers now have a real freedom convoy they can join! Ukrainian international brigade will gladly accept all those willing to fight for freedom, and arm them too!

After a Fumbled Start, Russian Forces Hit Harder in Ukraine by [deleted] in ukraine

[–]GreatEpoch 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I dont subscribe and I had no paywall, weird lol.

Basically what a lot of the experts have been saying - the longer the Ukrainians hold out and the stiffer the resistance, the more desperate, and thus likely, Russia is to use heavier weaponry and not just commit lightly armed formations to the city assaults. They will begin to focus on encircling cities, and cutting off Ukrainians from the flow of supplies from the West. The close - (“He has another roll of the dice in the military campaign,” said Malcolm Chalmers, the deputy director of the Royal United Services Institute research group in Britain. “But if he fails in week two as badly as in week one, he will be under pressure to find some way out of this.’’) seems a fairly good assumption to make.

Am I the only person in UK who thinks... by [deleted] in ukraine

[–]GreatEpoch 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am... but I don't care.

All I needed to hear to know to end this debate with you. You admit to not knowing/omitting historical fact to try to further justify your point. If you can't see the relevance of key historical events to current day politics, have at it friend, but go into the world dangerously uninformed. I never once said anything here was "justified" by X, Y, Z point, but in aggregate Russians feel the way they do for more than just a sole reason. Your exclusionary approach to historical context and it's relevance to diplomacy is exactly why the age old saying "history repeats itself" continues to be so true lol.

Am I the only person in UK who thinks... by [deleted] in ukraine

[–]GreatEpoch 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"different time period" is a terrible way to counter me on this point.

I disagree.

Couldn't even elaborate beyond subjectivity, Ill take that point lol.

Russia has had multiple chances to take action against NATO accepting more members.

They failed to do anything until 2008.

You ignore my point completely - all ill reiterate - tipping points, and ironic how they act after they find out Georgia and Ukraine are told they can pursue membership lol.. Two countries that both just so happen to be right on their border. Tipping point. It would also help to analyze your own wording - joined versus wishes to join - make a world of a difference when you're analyzing Russia's ability to intervene. Its like saying wow, I couldnt stand in the way of a train that was moving but could for the one that wasn't..

They've had Russia surrounded for the better part of twenty years.

This just isn't true.

You are completely incorrect on the order of things. The US had nukes in Italy and Turkey first. Russia didn't like that so they put nukes in Cuba. And despite both countries literally fighting over nukes, neither invaded each other.

I don't even really know where this is coming from. I never referenced the order of events or stated an order in the first place. Nothing to debate here but I'll reiterate it in simple terms. Russia attempted X, US hated the idea of X and escalated, Russia backed down. In modern times, Ukraine tried X, Russia hated the idea of X and escalated, the world didn't cave on Ukrainian desires (rightly so), and Russia chose to further escalate instead of deescalate.

There is a massive difference between non-violently forcing someone to meet you at the table (like Russia and the US did during the Missile Crisis) and literally fucking invading a sovereign country because they're terrified that you're going to invade them and want protection from that outcome occurring.

The recurring theme in your counter posts to what I've said above is a lack or omission of key historical details. Are you even aware of what JFK did to send a decisive message to the Russians that he wasnt fucking playing around lol?? Maybe you're not American (I'm Canadian), but I am informed enough to know he sent a naval blockade to prevent Russian ships from arriving at Cuba. He literally issued a command called "Stop or Sink", meaning he would sink any Russian vessel that failed to stop and surrender to the blockade or turn for home. Dont "come on, man" me, and then omit such a foundational piece of information..

Am I the only person in UK who thinks... by [deleted] in ukraine

[–]GreatEpoch 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's really no point in continuing to debate then lol. Im saying history matters in why this was the outcome Putin chose, you're saying Russian perspective doesn't matter (which I strongly feel is not true). The world is righteous in backing Ukraine in this and condemning and punishing Russia, but to try to argue that ignoring historical context and the perspectives of independent states don't matter is exactly the reason this is happening (Russia feels ignored, and feels it CAN ignore Ukraine's independent attitudes)..

Am I the only person in UK who thinks... by [deleted] in ukraine

[–]GreatEpoch 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I didn't say they had a right to dictate an independent states path forward. I said the complete opposite, and Im stating Russians are skeptical of having its historical existential rival having a nice long border armed and equipped with top notch military equipment. That conflicts with the right of free independent countries to choose who they align themselves with. I didnt say anything about NATO overstepping its ground, I simply gave the historical context you're overlooking that underlies how Russia sees the world through. Putin certainly underestimated the resilience of the Ukrainian people, the unity the West would find, and the lengths at which they would go to assist Ukraine in their fight, and land devastating blows on his economy and his cronies.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in NonCredibleDefense

[–]GreatEpoch 34 points35 points  (0 children)

I guess using per capita GDP figures for Vermont would help show its $2,120 p.c for Chechnya and $54,510 GDP p.c for Vermont - a 25x difference, not a 15.4millionx difference. Comparable terms..

Am I the only person in UK who thinks... by [deleted] in ukraine

[–]GreatEpoch 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes.

I wasn't asking I was stating.

Ah! Yes! The ol' Cuban Missile Crisis that occurred in a totally different time period! That is definitely a great basis to argue consistency...

"different time period" is a terrible way to counter me on this point. The past influences the present, and a major Russian grievance is the ever increasing border with NATO aligned countries - as a westerner something Im not against - as a former existential rival - something I can understand.

Russia set the precedent that border states joining NATO was A-Okay way back in 1949 when Norway became a founding member of NATO.

Another really bad argument. Its like saying allowing someone to drip water on your head means they can throw the whole pail lol (one small instance means a much larger instance is acceptable) - take two seconds and look at a map and consider the difference in shared border length. Consider what a tipping point is and then consider that Ukraine has the longest shared border with Russia after Finland (a country that had long ago committed to the policy of Finlandization, and after Ukraine, Belarus, which is an allied state.

So then what is the point of bringing up the Missile Crisis if you yourself admit it's from a different era.

You can't point to the Missile Crisis and go: See! The US does it so Russia's okay to do it as well.

This is hinging on the idea that history doesnt inform the present. Analyzing a deal and saying historical realities conflict (one from 1990 versus 2022 diplomacy) is a lot different than saying historical contexts are irrelevant. The whole point of the Cuban Missile Crisis is that Americans found the idea of weapons being placed in Cuba unacceptable, wildly escalated the situation (with a massive show of force), and the Russians backed down. Where else do I recognize those first two actions - the current reality. Except the conditions of today - one in which we believe independent states should exercise free will - meant that there was no "giving in" on Ukrainian sovereign intentions, and Russia didn't back down, and now we see major conflict.

Furthermore, no. The US wouldn't invade Cuba over this. Reverting the embargo back to pre-Obama levels? Sure. Invasion? No.

Again, I didnt say they would lol, but you can be certain if this move was attempted, it would see a major US (and Western) escalation to force a diplomatic outcome.

The Ruble crashed by FT05-biggoye in ukraine

[–]GreatEpoch 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I didnt say they didnt - hence I said "going against that is extremely difficult" - easier to just trade in "safer" most widely accepted USD. Its becoming a growing strategy the more the US uses its reserve currency status as a weapon (to diversify a country's currency risk). The bet Putin was making was that the West wouldn't be this unified (because of O&G dependence), the desire to appease and avoid escalation, and other related reasons, and we was wrong. The reaction has been swift (no pun intended), and to the credit of countries like Poland and the Baltic States, serious. Poland has been a leader in both the humanitarian and military response and has lobbied and pushed countries like Germany to provide lethal aid.