Dear Reader,
Trump won… But the deep state is alive and well…
And they just scored a HUGE win for Jeffrey Epstein's clients.
After years of hype, the DOJ has officially dropped the Epstein investigation…
And let countless unnamed conspirators off the hook.
But now the deep state has an even
bigger target.
A secret that, if revealed, could cost them hundreds of billions in profit.
RFK Jr. and the Trump administration are poised to expose everything…
But after what just happened with the Epstein files, we're not taking any chances.
We're taking this opportunity to reveal everything in the first in the first 5 minutes of
this video.
Watch it here now while it's still available online.
P.S. The
deep state secret revealed in this video is explosive and may bring down a lot of very powerful people. But it could also save your life. Learn the truth
here now while you still can.
at is a stout grass of medium to tall height. Its stem is jointed and usually hollow, forming a straw. There can be many stems on one plant. It has long narrow leaves, their bases sheathing the stem, one above each joint. At the top of the stem is the flower head, containing some 20 to 100 flowers. Each flower contains both male and female parts. The flowers are wind-pollinated, with over 99% of pollination events being self-pollinations and the rest cross-pollinations. The flower is housed in a pair of small leaflike glumes. The two (male) stamens and (female) stigmas protrude outside the glumes. The flowers are grouped into spikelets, each with between two and six flowers. Each fertilised carpel develops into a wheat grain or berry; botanically a caryopsis fruit, it is often called a seed. The grains ripen to a golden yellow; a head of grain is called an ear. Leaves emerge from the shoot apical meristem in a telescoping fashion until the transition to reproduction i.e. flowering. The last leaf produced by a wheat plant is known as the flag leaf. It is denser and has a higher photosynthetic rate than other leaves, to supply carbohydrate to the developing ear. In temperate countries the flag leaf, along with the second and third highest leaves on the plant, supply the majority of carbohydrate in the grain; their condition is critical for crop yield. Wheat is unusual in having more stomata on the upper (adaxial) side of the leaf, than on the under (abaxial) side. It has been theorised that this might be an effect of having been cultivated longer than any other plant. Winter wheat generally produces up to 15 leaves per shoot, and spring wheat up to 9; winter crops may have up to 35 tillers (shoots) per plant (depending on cultivar). Wheat roots are among the deepest of arable crops, extending as far down as 2 metres (6 ft 7 in). While the roots of a wheat plant are gro