@Investor_NICK_ Every month I look at my CC bill and debate whether I just cut Netflix. I barely use it. I don’t think I’m going another 20 years paying for it. Too much other content.
@AlphaDropRsrch I’ll probably buy some calls because why wouldn’t this moon? 3% of the float trading so valuation is meaningless until the lockups start coming up.
@SmallCapKing2 I haven’t done the work but I don’t think it can be justified at all. They would have to execute perfectly for a decade and find new revenue streams to get to even a remotely justifiable valuation here.
@AlphaDropRsrch I hope they just keep puking. I continue to think this is a raging long term bull and I hope we get some sick entries on people puking it all out
Absolutamente increíble. Lo que hoy ha hecho Barcelona se recordará mucho tiempo. La Sagrada Familia, Gaudí y los que durante 140 años han creído en ello, lo merecían.
Ray’s Rock - Omaha Beach
On the morning of June 6, 1944, 23 year old Staff Sergeant Arnold “Ray” Lambert came ashore with the first wave of the 1st Infantry Division on the eastern side of Omaha Beach. At this small patch of concrete he saved nearly 20 lives:
The division came under intense fire from several German bunkers surrounding the entrance to the Colville Draw (one of two exits off Omaha Beach). Ray, a medic, immediately went to work.
He was shot in the arm. Moments later he was hit by shrapnel in the leg, but Ray kept pulling men to safety. He pulled nearly 20 wounded soldiers to cover behind this 8ft wide obstacle, treating each soldier before going out in search of others.
After several hours under fire, while pulling a wounded soldier from the ocean, he was struck by a landing craft. It dropped its ramp on top of him, breaking his back. He fell face down in the water, drowning. The craft backed up and nearby soldiers pulled an unconscious Ray to safety, eventually evacuating him off the beach.
Remarkably, Ray had already earned two Silver Stars and three Purple Hearts in Sicily and North Africa, prior to landing in France. But here in Normandy his war would end.
He awoke in a hospital back in England a day later. In the next bed over was his brother, who had also been wounded at Omaha.
When asked about his work on D-Day, Ray simply said, “I did what I was called to do.”
Ray Lambert passed in 2021 at 100 years old. He exemplified the best of American grit and why remembering this day is so important.
@Investor_NICK_ Once a fashion brand begins its decline it needs to fully die before it can be reborn. The only way to become fashionable again is to first become unfashionable.