I think it was $YOU. $41.44I won't but I know I'm getting old-- there was another airport security stk which allowed folks to walk right through fast- one I found do you have any idea what that was?
It held up pretty decent too.
I think it was $YOU. $41.44I won't but I know I'm getting old-- there was another airport security stk which allowed folks to walk right through fast- one I found do you have any idea what that was?
Why you got to post that poster on Patrick!!
Remember when Starks rose up and jammed on Jordon?

We had a CO2 play. What was the dry-ice company out of Cali?No Soda in England.
(Bloomberg) -- The British Soft Drinks Association said manufacturers have “only a few days” of carbon dioxide left in reserve to produce beverages and can’t import supplies from the European Union due to Brexit.
In the latest sign of how a widespread shortage of CO2 is causing shock waves in Britain’s food and drink sector, most carbon dioxide suppliers aren’t scheduling deliveries earlier than 24 hours in advance, which means manufacturers have no visibility on stock levels or when they will receive their next batch, the trade group said in a statement Monday.
The U.K. also can’t rely on imports from Europe as a Dutch plant it sources CO2 from is prioritizing EU clients and the Norwegian plant is shortly due to close for maintenance for up to two weeks, the group said.
Supplies of CO2 have been hit in Britain after fertilizer maker CF Industries Holdings Inc. responded last week to surging natural gas prices by closing U.K. plants that make carbon dioxide as a byproduct. Rival Yara International ASA is also curtailing European capacity. The knock-on effect on the food and drink industry has been sudden and dramatic as the gas is used in a number of ways from stunning pigs and chickens for slaughter to extending the shelf life of products and producing carbonated drinks.
The shortages are compounding an already fraught U.K. food supply chain that has been battling to keep shelves stocked due to a lack of warehouse workers and truck drivers as a result of Brexit and the pandemic.
The trade association’s warning comes a few hours after AG Barr Plc, which produces carbonated drinks including Scotland’s Irn-Bru, warned that its production could be impacted if the situation worsens across Europe. The Scotsman newspaper earlier reported that supplies of the orange-colored drink were at risk.
The U.K. has been hit by a shortage of carbon dioxide before in 2018 when operators closed production facilities down for maintenance. This time’s different, the British Soft Drinks Association said, with two of the biggest fertilizer plants that supply carbon dioxide ceasing operations indefinitely.
Robinhood alert:
Watch this one today.
$AMTX
$1.88
FDA approval for their over-the-counter hand sanitizer.
Is GBA a stock? .
-The savant
It just sticks. Its one of those things that people read once and remember. Like onion-ice cream.
Its friggin available too.
Buy it Stoney!!!!
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(good job on DOMO btw. You picked it 3 days ago and it was one of the few green stocks yesterday, even at the bottom. Now that's the definition of a great pick)
I'm halfway serious, you really should register that. $12 and it takes all of 2 minutes. We can work with it later, but get the name.