Well done.
As (if) you dig deeper, you'll find that the store had decreasing revenues, and the owner was more than happy to sell it to someone who didn't care.
QASP's ONLY business is selling shares. The store front made that possible.
Even if by some miracle something that Q is engaged in happened to turn a profit, the pref A shareholders would get 6/7 of it, leaving commons with 1/7.
Of course, the pref A holders don't have to worry about losses because they have no liability. Commons get all the losses and dilution effects.
The convertible note holders control the company, and all they care about is moving money from our pockets to theirs.
Any apparent dedication to military is superficial and a ploy to lure in more buyers by playing that sympathy card. Q had a military man who was qualified to run the flight training business. They ran him off and didn't compensate him for his time....
Q specializes in false PR's and back door promotions. Good luck.