Quote from RainMann:
NYSE,
There looks to be a reoccurring theme in many of your texts. One would gather from these texts that if sufficiently enlightened, ones trading can be accomplished merely by looking at the chart. Do you posses such a skill? Can I cast away my multi degreed Gann Wheel with the gold tone case, my infinitely variable Fibonacci time extender, and my super Planetary expialidosis. What havoc this would wreak in my world. To glance at a screen full of bars and behold the world markets as if so much milk. We have so long yearned for this power, yea I posit that we die for it.

Quote from RainMann:
I need to know when an announcement is going to occur. I scalp during the day and I don't want a 3" tall bar skewering my stops when the "Housing Starts" go bad.

Quote from caementarius:
There are a lot of misconceptions (mostly vague spiritual stuff) about just what Enlightenment, seeing the Light, etc is. Herewith a classic definition:
What is Enlightenment?
"Enlightenment is man's emergence from his self-incurred immaturity. Immaturity
is the inability to use one's own understanding without the guidance of another.
This immaturity is self-incurred if its cause is not lack of understanding, but
lack of resolution and courage to use it without the guidance of another. The
motto of enlightenment is therefore: Sapere aude! Have courage to use your own
understanding!" ...
It is class_ic

Quote from Redneck trader:
No question - knowing when certain announcements will occur is important
But forming any opinion of how the market will react to said announcement(s) is dangerous - IMHO of course because I don't know a damn thing
eta - truth be known I don't really believe the market reacts to anything (except possibly major events) - It, for the most part, just does what is necessary to make "most" lose
I do believe "they" make up stories (attach a good news story, or bad news story) to make "most" believe the market did what it did - on any given day - for that particular reason (news event)

Quote from RainMann:
If I had to pick out just what it is on the chart that I most readily see without any indicators, is that the market spends all day doing the same thing. It makes a new high (or low) then it darts below that high, then it makes a new high, and then it darts below it again. Seems like trading should be simple.