Back pain is one of the most common, and frustrating issues today - effecting over 35 million people every single day, and costing over $100 billion dollars a year.
Not only that, but back pain and sciatica can also lead to weight gain, depression, anxiety, insomnia, acid reflux, digestive disorders, and even sexual problems.
I don't think it's a stretch to say that back pain & sciatica are 2 of the most dangerous, yet overlooked, health ailments today.
But, what if there was a simple solution to your problems?
What this simple stretch could ERASE all of your back pain.
WITHOUT dangerous and possibly life-threatening surgeries, expensive prescriptions, frustrating visits to your doctor and other professionals.
My friend Emily was just like you - struggling every single day with back pain when she decided "enough was enough" and poured herself into discovering a simple solution to her pain, depression, anxiety, and anger.
After countless hours of trial and error, she was able to discover a simple, and somewhat strange, stretch that completely eliminated her back pain once and for all, and now she wants to share that stretch with you.
> Discover the #1 stretch that ERASES back pain & sciatica (works even better for people over the age of 40)
The honest truth is that most medical treatments for back pain do NOT stop the "hidden" cause of your pain - they only seek to stop the symptoms, or just cover them up by "deadening" the muscles.
This simple stretch ELIMINATES the root cause of your pain, and can completely erase your back pain & sciatica problems once and for all.
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Joel
telligence starts by looking for places in one's own organization that could easily be exploited by foreign intelligence services (FIS). FIS is an established term of art in the counterintelligence community, and, in today's world, "foreign" is shorthand for "opposing". Opposition might indeed be a country, but it could be a transnational group or an internal insurgent group. Operations against a FIS might be against one's own nation, or another friendly nation. The range of actions that might be done to support a friendly government can include a wide range of functions, certainly including military or counterintelligence activities, but also humanitarian aid and aid to development (i.e., "nation building"). Terminology here is still emerging, and "transnational group" could include not only terrorist groups but also transnational criminal organization. Transnational criminal organizations include the drug trade, money laundering, extortion targeted against computer or communications systems, smuggling, etc. "Insurgent" could be a group opposing a recognized government by criminal or military means, as well as conducting clandestine intelligence and covert operations against the government in question, which could be one's own or a friendly one. Counterintelligence and counterterrorism analyses provide strategic assessments of foreign intelligence and terrorist groups and prepare tactical options for ongoing operations and investigations. Counterespionage may involve proactive acts against foreign intelligence services, such as double agents, deception, or recruiting foreign intelligence officers. While clandestine HUMINT sources can give the greatest insight into the adversary's thinking, they may also be most vulnerable to the adversary's attacks on one's own organization. Before trusting an enemy agent, remember that such people started out as being trusted by their own countries. They may still be loyal to that country. Offensive counterintelligence operations Wisner emphasized his own, and Dulles', views that the best defense against foreign attacks on, or infiltration of, intelligence services is active measures against those hostile services. This is often called counterespionage: measures taken to detect enemy espionage or physical attacks against friendly intelligence services, prevent damage and information loss, and, where possible, to turn the attempt back against its originator. Counterespionage goes beyond being reactive, and actively tries to subvert hostile intelligence services, by recruiting agents in the foreign service, by discrediting personnel actually loyal to their own service, and taking away resources that would be useful to the hostile service. All of these actions apply to non-national threats as well as to national organizations. If the hostile action is in one's own country, or in a friendly one with cooperating police, the hostile agents may be arrested, or, if diplomats, declared persona non grata. From the perspective of one's own intelligence service, exploiting the situation to the advantage of one's side is usually preferable to arrest or actions that might result in the death of the threat. The intelligence priority sometimes comes into conflict with the instincts of one's own law enforcement organizations, especially when the foreign threat combines foreign personnel with citizens of one's country. In some circumstances, arrest may be a first step, in which the prisoner is given the choice of cooperating, or facing severe consequence up to and including a death sen
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