ON ON Semiconductor Corporation $76.66-4.55 (-5.60%) There is some decent support in the $76 level. // This is the type of name we might consider here-- An A+ member of a group that stands to benefit from this re allocation of funds. I have to think Tech steps up here with banks and Oil in the dumps.
As I recall from back in the day, when ON was ONNN and it was pegged to $6 forever, they fab their chips in the U.S. I don't know if they still do, but that might be why they've held up so well. Note INTC is green today too, or barely red. Kinda makes me worry about China/Taiwan. What better time to make a move. You have Europe sweating a system-wide bank failure, and the U.S... no one knows wtf is going on. Your WOLF.... traitors... they are building a $3B plant in Germany.
THE LIZARD KING'S LAST STAND- BANK FAILURES SCARE THE LIZARD KING. HE NO LIKE THEM. Pavlov’s House in Stalingrad – 1942/ S&P 3,888. Operation Barbarossa was the largest invasion force ever, involving over 4 million Axis forces and some 600,000 motorized vehicles in an attempt to conquer the Soviet Union. The frontline extended over 1,800 miles from north to south. In the initial stages of the operation, the Soviets lost in swift succession what are now present-day Ukraine, Belarus, and the Baltic States. These regions were some of the most populous in the nation, and the most industrialized. They also suffered heavy losses with the army being more or less in disarray. On the southern part, Hitler decided to go for the oil fields in the Caucasus region, but diverted his 6th Army towards Stalingrad. The city didn’t hold any significant strategic importance, but it did bear the name of the Soviet dictator, Joseph Stalin. But what the Nazis believed to be an easy victory turned out to be one of the bloodiest conflicts in human history. The Soviets held up a stout resistance and fought for every square inch of the city. Though they were mostly driven from the Western bank of the Volga in Stalingrad, a narrow stretch of the river bank still remained under Russian control. One place located here was Pavlov’s House, a four story apartment building. The building had a great location, right in front of a large square, with great visibility on all sides. Roughly 30 Soviet soldiers, led by Junior Sgt. Yakov Pavlov, fortified it the best they could and laid mines and barbed wire around it. With a supply line from across the river, the soldiers were able to fend off wave upon wave of German attacks. They had machine guns at every available window and anti-tank rifles and mortars on the roof. The building was besieged several times a day, every day for two months, but the Germans were never able to take it. Relief came on November 25, 1942 with a massive Soviet counterattack. Jokingly, the Soviet commanding general Vasily Chuikov said that the Germans lost more men and tanks in trying to take Pavlov’s house than taking Paris. Now, if the Soviets had lost the house, they would have had a much harder time in mounting a successful counterattack across the river. If they had lost the Battle of Stalingrad, chances are that the entire Soviet Union would have fallen at the hands of the Nazis. This battle was, in fact, the turning point of WWII. HOLED UPON 22ND ST. SMOKE IN THE AIR LOTS OF IT ANGRY WORDS BEING THROWN ABOUT--NO I'M NOT GOING TO THE COUNTRY I'M TOO TENSE. I HAVE TO DO MY TAXES. CHARLESTON PLAYS TOMORROW AT 3:00. THE LIZARD KING IS HERE, HE SAYS THIS IS HIS LAST STAND. HIS PAVLOV'S HOUSE. SO BE IT.
BIG PETE IS UP A BUCK ON TWLO-- FEELING LIKE MAYBE I SHOULDN'T OF CHICKENED OUT..... THE SEMIS WERE ACTING WELL JUST BEFORE THIS MESS I THINK I PREFER THE FISHING THERE... TWLO LOOKS READY TO REBOUND THOUGH. EXPENSIVE OR NOT. MBLY TOO.