My take on this does not sound like anything I have heard from anyone else. We got in really early-I believe it was in early '08. We tried the products and visited the facility. Things looked quite good at that time. Distribution seemed to be a problem, and Jared H did not seem to get anywhere with it, other than supplying great products to those of us that could find a way to get them. Then he hired Bill White to do the distribution. I visited again (from central MI) and talked to BW about some people that I knew that were interested in the product. He never contacted them. I heard he was getting a good salary from EESO, but never saw any product movement from his efforts or lack of effort. Then, BW found a connection with Mallad. It sounded great. It looked like the product would get distribution, so I signed up to sell it, as I believed in the product. It ended up being so much more expensive than it had been. Also, it looks to me like Mallad and BW swiped the product right out from under the share holders. Jared got too greedy when he signed with Wowgreen, thinking he would get rich quick. I think they must have gotten Jared drunk for him to sign what he did. I think that when he realized what was happening, he panicked and got those shares that had not been authorized, hoping to regain control of the company. That backfired worse than anyone not familiar with the market and it's rules ever imagined. In the meantime,IMO, BW started his own company using the formulas that he had gotten while employed for Jared. The world was ready for green products, but not for the competition caused by 3 companies trying to get rich on the same products. I don't see where any of them have been successful trying to market the products. It looked good, but we all lost out because of greed. When I look at where this could have gone, I believe I lost out on some profits because of my own greed. I kept waiting for 'just a little bit more'. I didn't lose any money, as I sold a bunch when it started to go down from the high. I could have done better if I had sold before it started down that slippery slope.