RE:RE:A nice read!!!!! A little fiction but quite accurate There is no doubt that world stock markets are permeated with criminal fraud, scam artists of every conceivable make-up, manipulation saturation, and just flat out scammers and pumping scumbags galore.
And when it comes to the micro-cap and mid-level resource companies or those entities claiming to be those types of shells that are listed on domiciled on Canadian exchanges, there is no place on earth that has a bigger collection of low-life scumbags and flat-out scammers than in Canada and it financial resource related district.
The scummy Canadian under-belly of this sector is so vast, the public in general has come to welcome its perverse machination and uses the same scummy shady tactics that the big-boys thrive on to profit in any fashion possible.
Just reading through 99% of the stockhouse comments daily makes this perfectly clear in spades.
Never lose sight of these facts..............most of the scumbag pumpers that buy and sell stocks and work for these Canadian scalper entities would cook their own mother in an microwave to make a buck.
Identifying these types of sh*theads is not rocket science because they are easily caught in a web of lies and unethical activity of their own making. And yes, even EQT has it's own little group of Canadian resource pick-pockets and SH is their little virtual redention of the microwave.
TheDurangoKid wrote: Another good story teller is David Hodge, who was interviewed on June 24 as president of Commerce Resources Corp., a mineral exploration company. Hodge was president of George Resources Corp. in June 1997 when the company issued impressive gold assays on its Bolivia property. The share price soared, then plunged when the company revealed its assay laboratory, Actlabs of Colorado, had inadvertently over-stated gold values by five times. No fault was attributed to George Resource, which changed its name to Rocca Resources and acquired Siegesoft.com Inc., which claimed to have developed Internet privacy software. "Siegesoft.com's inception reads like a storybook,'' Rocca gushed, describing how a 15-year-old Chicago "whiz kid" had designed the software after he was unable to take an advanced math course. The whiz kid angle created some positive media coverage and the stock surged, providing a mysterious Turks and Caicos company, which had fortuitously loaded up on shares before the company's announcement, with a huge potential profit. Alas, the deal was later scuttled and Rocca's stock melted. "Let's put this in perspective," said Levy. "I am paid a nominal amount to ask questions. I do not have the opportunity to do due diligence on every single person who comes on the show." https://www.radiowest.ca/forum/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=363