"I do not know what Zen will finally yield to it's investors. I hope it is good, but I won't say it is an absolute guarantee that people will get what they came for.
so then.. i guess you don't own any ZEN.
here's how a genuine ZEN shareholder would have naturally worded these two sentences.
"I do not know what ZEN will finally yield to us. I hope it is good, but I won't say it is an absolute guarantee that we will get what we came for.""
You exemplify exactly what I'm talking about: people who look at a narrow set of variables on which to base their bias.
The distinction in my use of wording is not a matter of who has how many shares, and as I stated I'm all in, but in the different way they might view and handle their shares in comparison to myself. So if you are truly open minded as opposed to fearful of an opposing idea, you'll be able to go back over the language and recognize the above.