Face it, my argument was blatantly obvious and your arguments were quite clearly ridiculous. Shareholders were simply too blinded by greed to see the truth of that at the time. You are making the same mistake all over again.
Like I said then, no one knows when. You didn't know then, and you don't know now. Saying a share price will fall isn't enough to make money. It's the ability to know when it will fall.
Look at when you were saying AM was overvalued, the price and profits increased significantly after your prediction. You were advising to not invest in AM when you could have doubled your money. You were off by several months, which meant significant profits earned by a lot of us during that time frame.
With Labcon, it was the opposite. You were buying when you should have been selling. You insisted that your math and arguments were valid, yet you were wrong.