Monday, July 21, 2008 5:34:19 PM
Shalom Flsunchaser. Thank you for your diligence and consistent encouragement to the shareholders of H3, particularly during what may become another season of unproductive turbulence within the H3 and the apparent negative impact that H3 may face in the marketplace as a result of the questionable and unjustified dismissal of Dr. Benjamin Chavis as H3's President and CEO. I am sure that Keith Chutjian, Brian Peters and Jack Freedman have what they considered their legitimate reasons for dismissing Dr. Chavis because of his challenge to the H3 Board of Directors to be more honest and forthright with the shareholders of H3 and Dr Chavis' insistence that H3 would stop engaging in "Pump and Dump" activities. Of course the Board of Directors had the right to say "Good Bye" to Dr. Chavis, but the Board of Directors did not have the right to mistreat him nor his executive management team by not compensating them for the last nine months of work that they performed for H3. There is an old Jewish proverb that says: "When money speaks, the truth is heard sometimes silently, but it will be heard." Just as when someone actually called to Attorney Jean-Pierre, we found out that he is in good legal standing in the state of New York. That was good news to hear.
I pray that Flsunchaser, Scoopman, Mississippi Delta and many others like me who are also shareholders of H3 will attempt to get the "truth" first hand from Dr. Chavis about St. Petersburg, Tampa, Miami, New York, Atlanta, Houston and Los Angeles in regards to H3, before we rush to judgment on him and his executive team members that have been terminated. The truth that I hear even over the roar of Chutjian's derived wealth and profits from the low 3 cents per share value of H3 today is that the truth of the H3 disaster in St. Petersburg lies squarely in the impotent and inexperience laps of Brian Peters (whose name solely appears on the fatal St. Pete property lease), Chutjian, Freedman, M. Labertew and K. Lund all together who squandered more than 1 million dollars of H3 money on the St Pete project failure that was being micromanaged out of the mind and pocket of Chutjian and now Chutjian gets the opportunity to convert and acquire millions more of H3 shares as his self-award and personal profit against the interests of H3's other less endowed shareholders. Flsunchaser you are eager along with Chutjian, Peters and Freedman to now use Chavis, Fleming and Ellis as scapegoats for the illegal insider trading actions of Chutjian and others. You are very inaccurate when you untruthfully stated that Dr. Chavis "switched concepts" after he came aboard H3. Before Dr. Chavis came to H3, Brian Peters, Keith Chutjian and Jack Freedom did not have clue to what an actual Hip Hop Soda Shop was. That is the reason during the prior two years before Chavis and his team arrived, there had never been a real plan to open a Hip Hop Soda Shop. Yes the shares at one point in the past went up above 70 cents only to be later dumped back down to 3 cents because there was no real franchise in existence. It is understandable that you want to protect Chutjian and others as they thought unwisely that getting rid of Chavis and his team would shield their unholy deeds. I hear that Dr. Chavis and a growing group of H3 shareholders may be planning a class action law suit to rescue H3 from the unaudited, self-destructive course that H3 is now headed. Best wishes to the new management team and I pray that they will be treated better than the Chavis team. The last thing that I hear is that the leaders of Microsoft are upset concerning the Chavis termination and may set the stage now for Microsoft to terminate the agreement between H3 and Microsoft that the Chavis team had closed on behalf of H3 three months ago. The real good news is that H3 still has a chance to repent and get back on the right path without waiting for the next storm to come. As a shareholder, I want H3 to be successful and profitable. As a public traded company, H3 can not gain financial profit in the world after having lost its soul. Shalom. This is just what I hear!
I pray that Flsunchaser, Scoopman, Mississippi Delta and many others like me who are also shareholders of H3 will attempt to get the "truth" first hand from Dr. Chavis about St. Petersburg, Tampa, Miami, New York, Atlanta, Houston and Los Angeles in regards to H3, before we rush to judgment on him and his executive team members that have been terminated. The truth that I hear even over the roar of Chutjian's derived wealth and profits from the low 3 cents per share value of H3 today is that the truth of the H3 disaster in St. Petersburg lies squarely in the impotent and inexperience laps of Brian Peters (whose name solely appears on the fatal St. Pete property lease), Chutjian, Freedman, M. Labertew and K. Lund all together who squandered more than 1 million dollars of H3 money on the St Pete project failure that was being micromanaged out of the mind and pocket of Chutjian and now Chutjian gets the opportunity to convert and acquire millions more of H3 shares as his self-award and personal profit against the interests of H3's other less endowed shareholders. Flsunchaser you are eager along with Chutjian, Peters and Freedman to now use Chavis, Fleming and Ellis as scapegoats for the illegal insider trading actions of Chutjian and others. You are very inaccurate when you untruthfully stated that Dr. Chavis "switched concepts" after he came aboard H3. Before Dr. Chavis came to H3, Brian Peters, Keith Chutjian and Jack Freedom did not have clue to what an actual Hip Hop Soda Shop was. That is the reason during the prior two years before Chavis and his team arrived, there had never been a real plan to open a Hip Hop Soda Shop. Yes the shares at one point in the past went up above 70 cents only to be later dumped back down to 3 cents because there was no real franchise in existence. It is understandable that you want to protect Chutjian and others as they thought unwisely that getting rid of Chavis and his team would shield their unholy deeds. I hear that Dr. Chavis and a growing group of H3 shareholders may be planning a class action law suit to rescue H3 from the unaudited, self-destructive course that H3 is now headed. Best wishes to the new management team and I pray that they will be treated better than the Chavis team. The last thing that I hear is that the leaders of Microsoft are upset concerning the Chavis termination and may set the stage now for Microsoft to terminate the agreement between H3 and Microsoft that the Chavis team had closed on behalf of H3 three months ago. The real good news is that H3 still has a chance to repent and get back on the right path without waiting for the next storm to come. As a shareholder, I want H3 to be successful and profitable. As a public traded company, H3 can not gain financial profit in the world after having lost its soul. Shalom. This is just what I hear!
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