WS:
Good to have you still with us. It ought not take a genius to see that a lot of investors have stayed the course on this matter, even though it might from afar seemed a lost cause some time ago!
Hopefully, before all is said and done, the justice dept. or the media will take note of our steadfastness in this case. It ought to signal that something is happening above and beyond the usual "company goes belly-up" scenario.
The matter was thrown into the world of the courts and the lawyers before we could band together and promote our own agenda. We see now what it means to be in the stranglehold of lawyers and their system. I've often wondered if any of them ever stand back and study their profession? In my consulting work, I hold a degree, my work is backed by a state license, my state board rules us with a strong hand. Any encroachment on their rules, any infraction against the public, and those in my profession get examined and the public is made whole in every possible way. We are disciplined without restraint.
I feel reasonably certain that no lawyer who has promoted or enabled this debacle will ever answer one question about his intent or activities.
IMES was operated as a public company. But all along, even before the bankruptcy, it has been managed as though it were a private entity. Every time its public owners have tried to get a seat at the table, they have been met with scorn. And now that we are in the lawyers world, instead of a seat to present our case, we again are met with scorn and a backhand.
I understand that the fight continues, and that we are still asserting ourselves. But it is clear now, beyond much doubt at all, that the legal system does not operate for the peoples' benefit. Rather it serves the interest of the lawyers and their courts. Just how far does the legal "profession" intend to extend their power over us? I see up close now, what is written about regularly in the media. The legal system is truly broken down and can no longer handle the simplest matters of fairness, right and wrong.
The situation is truly more debilitating than the loss of an investment.
dd |