I don't even know how to respond to all that... it's far too complicated.
Thanks for the reply.
Got Gaps?
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Printable View
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Is it merely?
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Not defend a position in this thread...
In some of the other posts you've put up and other's favorite names to describe you start to appear...
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My fantasies?
You bring your net over... and it's my fantasy?
When I'm talking about d umb s's net... it's for a whole other reason...
I just like fat dyQues, that's why I let you in...
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X cess S P A C I N G
Is a sign of childhood problems and a need for attention.
But WTF, If you feel better then go for it.
Looks like Hookd needs a new username.
Está quemado el güey.
How do you keep a (layd-ee) Quagaga quiet?
Attachment 47944
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
TOANO, Va. — May 10, 2016, 8:22 PM ET
Losses worsened at Lumber Liquidators during the first three months of its fiscal year and sales declined for a fifth straight quarter as the flooring company spent heavily to put behind it damaging reports of potentially dangerous and illegal products from China.
Its stock fell almost 8 percent.
In a tentative agreement, the company, through its insurers, will contribute $26 million to a settlement fund to resolve a related class action. Lumber Liquidators will also contribute a million of its shares to the fund.
That follows an announcement last month that the Toano, Virginia, company would pay $2.5 million to settle allegations that some of its products violated California's air-safety standards. Last year, it paid $13.2 million in fines and pleaded guilty to environmental crimes for importing China-made flooring that contained timber illegally logged in eastern Russia.
Lumber Liquidators has been in damage-control mode and attempting to repair its image since a February 2015 airing of CBS news show "60 Minutes," which revealed that some of the chain's Chinese-made laminate flooring contained high levels of the carcinogen formaldehyde.
watching this company from my contraband formaldehyde laden floor...
it's down another 7-8% today...
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There's really nothing positive to report for Lumber Liquidators. The company can't gain sales traction or get customers to change their perception that its products are unsafe. What's concerning is that there doesn't seem to be a great way back from these depths. There's only so much advertising or reassuring a company can do and Lumber Liquidators has done that for most of the past year. Without a turnaround in sight, this is a stock I'm certainly not betting on recovering anytime soon.
[MF, quoted from...]