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If for any reason you can’t carry a CCW, then you need to check this out!

(Heck, even if your CCW is at your side 24/7, you still need one of these.)

It’s a 10 Million Volt compact stun gun that would make Andre the Giant curl up in the fetal position with the press of a button.




I call it The Stingray.

And in addition to it being one NASTY and easy to use self-defense tool, I’ve got even better news!

Right now, you can pick one up for UNDER $15 and I’ll even pay for the shipping.

The great thing about this tool is that, sure, it’s powerful as hell and it’s easy to use!

But it also doesn’t do permanent damage like a gun or blade.

So you don’t have to worry about getting sued by some lawyered-up mugger.

IMPORTANT: I’m only able to offer 200 Stingrays as part of this limited blowout.

Once they’re gone, it’s back to retail.

Grab yours right here before I run out

Jerry

P.S. As a VIP, don’t hesitate to pick one of these up for every member of your household to make sure they’re well protected in case of an emergency.




















 

nsistent with the three modes of fruit development, plant scientists have classified fruits into three main groups: simple fruits, aggregate fruits, and multiple (or composite) fruits. The groupings reflect how the ovary and other flower organs are arranged and how the fruits develop, but they are not evolutionarily relevant as diverse plant taxa may be in the same group. While the section of a fungus that produces spores is called a fruiting body, fungi are members of the fungi kingdom and not of the plant kingdom. Simple fruits A dry simple fruit: milkweed (Asclepias syriaca); dehiscence of the follicular fruit reveals seeds within. Simple fruits are the result of the ripening-to-fruit of a simple or compound ovary in a single flower with a single pistil. In contrast, a single flower with numerous pistils typically produces an aggregate fruit; and the merging of several flowers, or a 'multiple' of flowers, results in a 'multiple' fruit. A simple fruit is further classified as either dry or fleshy. To distribute their seeds, dry fruits may split open and discharge their seeds to the winds, which is called dehiscence. Or the distribution process may rely upon the decay and degradation of the fruit to expose the seeds; or it may rely upon the eating of fruit and excreting of seeds by frugivores – both are called indehiscence. Fleshy fruits do not split open, but they also are indehiscent and they may also rely on frugivores for distribution of their seeds. Typically, the entire outer layer of the ovary wall ripens into a potentially edible pe