#15 Doesn't make sense. He offered the sale, you say, but you're also saying he bought enough shares to get control of the company, then fired himself?
#9 This kind of thing is shockingly common there are plenty of revolutionary useful technologies that are kept secret and buried by big corporations because it would cost them or make them less money. Big pharma could be sitting on a cure for diabetes and not make it public because an insulin subscription is more lucrative. I am also legally required to tell that such a cure does not exist.
"When Benjamin Franklin died in 1790, he willed the cities of Boston and Philadelphia $4,400 each, but with the stipulation that the money could not be spent for 200 years. By 1990 Boston’s trust was worth over $5 million. "
#15 Doesn't make sense. He offered the sale, you say, but you're also saying he bought enough shares to get control of the company, then fired himself?
#9 This kind of thing is shockingly common there are plenty of revolutionary useful technologies that are kept secret and buried by big corporations because it would cost them or make them less money. Big pharma could be sitting on a cure for diabetes and not make it public because an insulin subscription is more lucrative. I am also legally required to tell that such a cure does not exist.