Let's face it, everybody who has followed this thread and all of this company's many- faceted stories knows by now that the people running the show at Leah Industries Incorporated are a complicated lot. The complicated orchestration of events that we have witnessed over the past year reveal a somewhat eccentric and complicated management behind the scenes that has both amazed us and tried the wits and patience of every one of us shareholders here. If the long- promised and awaited audit does not reveal this diamond-in-the rough of a company soon, then I would not be surprised if somebody out there soon should attempt a messy class action suit as a try to see whether this company is ever going to show us the money.
A few days ago, I wrote Alex Nafanilov and told him something he probably doesn't hear from stockholders too often-- I gave Alex and company some words of encouragement and some kind wishes for the future, I even offered some thanks. Believe me, it didn't come easy, but I did so based on the assumption that these guys are working for me. I'll take the liberty of sharing his e-mailed response,
Dear Sir,
I would like to thank you for your comments. We hope to fulfill your wishes as they are very much part of what management wants.
Regards,
Alex Nafanailov
The main thing that has kept some form of expectation alive in us shareholders left holding this mystery bag is that, by-golly, these guys keep showing up at the office every day, despite everything! These people keep answering the phones and e-mails -- well, (except to those they've decided to blacklist). And despite an amazing lack of proof, they hold firm to their story. I find myself really wanting to believe their story, and for reasons more than just the few thousand dollars I plonked down on their story, it is something akin to reading a suspense novel or watching a highly dramatical movie, and I just can't wait to see the good guys win; but I also am in great suspense to see this play out: just to see if I am right, that there really is someone here that I can call good guys in all this.
So, here I sit. I call myself an investor in Leah Industries. I really don't think that anybody knows how this story is going to end-- not even those making it. But I have every reason to believe what Alex just wrote me in the above e-mail to be true. We can conjure- up all sorts of motives for why, but I think we should all accept it as a fact that management wants to see this stock fly, soar, and arrive at its lofty goals just as much as every other shareholder does.
Well, thanks for reading my thoughts if you made it to here. |