lunes, 22 de abril de 2019

Stolen From NASA!



This story is pretty crazy.

In the mid 60s NASA was hard at work coming up with new technologies for the space program.

One of the most impressive technologies they perfected was used to protect sensitive equipment from the extreme cold of outer space.

Recently that technology was made available to the public. And the good news is a group of brilliant survivalists decided to use it in a brand new piece of survival gear.

You can see it here.

While the material wasn't actually stolen from NASA, the idea to use it to protect people certainly was.

And now their space age material can be found in a survival tool that's arguably more important than food, water, ammo, guns, etc.

Once you see it and how crazy useful it is you'll understand why people have been going bananas to get their own.

The odds are quite high you're going to love this new survival tool too.
  • It's crazy small: Fits in the palm of your hand even though it stretches out over 6 feet long!
  • It's extremely light: Only weighs 6.2 ounces so you can carry it wherever!
  • Recommended by experts: Top survivalists call this one of the best inventions of all time.
Plus so much more.

Right now you can get this new, NASA inspired survival tool for a very special price.

But you've got to hurry, the special offer to get this new tool + a Bonus Stormproof Survival Tool could be pulled down at any second.

See all the details on the following page.

~ Walter

P.S. Do you want to know something really awesome about this "stolen technology"? It's 20% off the regular price on the next page - Check it out here now.







worked since 1846). The city's other newspaper was the Lynchburg Daily Virginian, then published by Joseph Button, who on June 23, 1860 (while R.H. Glass was out of town) died in a duel with Glass's editor at the time, George W. Hardwicke, over accusations that Glass used his postal office to disadvantage the rival paper. Major Glass ultimately remarried and had seven additional children, including Meta Glass (president of Sweet Briar College) and Edward Christian Glass (who served as Lynchburg's school superintendent for five decades). When the American Civil War (1861–1865) broke out, Lynchburg was pro-Union but also pro-slavery, since its economy depended on the manufacture of tobacco as well as slave-trading and the new railroads. R. H. Glass volunteered and joined the Virginia forces in 1861, and then joined the Confederate Army, where he became a major on the staff of Brigadier General John B. Floyd, a former Governor of Virginia. Although Glass's father survived the Civil War, 18 of his mother's relatives did not. dent as a favorite son candidate from Virginia. Glass served at the Treasury until 1920, when he was appointed to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Virginia's senior senator, Thomas Staples Martin. Martin had been widely regarded as the head of Virginia's Democratic Party, a role filled during the 1920s by Harry Flood Byrd of Winchester, another Virginia newspaperman who shared many of Glass's political views and who headed the political machine of Conservative Democrats known as the Byrd Organization, which dominated Virginia's politics until the 1960s. In 1933, Byrd became Virginia's junior Senator, joining Glass in the Senate after former Governor and then-senior U.S. Senator Claude A. Swanson was appointed as U.S. Secretary of the Navy by President Franklin Roosevelt. Both Glass and Byrd were opposed to Roosevelt's New Deal policies. Each was a strong supporter of fiscal conservatism and state's rights. Glass and Byrd invoked senatorial courtesy to defeat Roosevelt's nomination of Floyd H. Roberts to a federal judgeship, as part of a broader conflict over control of federal patronage in Virginia. Glass served in the U.S. Senate for the remainder of his life, turning down the offer of a new appointment as Secretary of the Treasury from President Roosevelt in 1933. When the Democrats regained control o In poverty-stricken Virginia during the post-War period, the young Glass received only a basic education at a private school run by one-legged former Confederate Henry L. Daviess. However, his father kept an extensive library. He became an apprentice printer to his father (and Hardwicke) when he was 13 years old, and continued his education through reading. Carter Glass read Plato, Edmund Burke and William Shakespeare, among others that






 

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