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Sadly, Walmart will not sell you what you're about to see.
And when you see why... you'll realize they're basically flipping you off right to your face.

First, they stopped selling firearms and ammo in over half their stores...

Now there's yet another life-saving item you won’t find in any Walmart.

It's a book called The First 72 Hours.

And the reason you won’t see it in Walmart (or any other major retailer) will make you livid.

The First 72 Hours was written by one of the world's leading survival authors, Phil Elmore.

It's a simple guide that will help any American family discover how to be totally unreliant on the government in the event of a crisis.

It shows you exactly what to do in the first few days following a major emergency.

Without a doubt...

It has information that will save lives.

But since it contains a few politically "unpopular" opinions about how Americans should prepare for a crisis...

You won't see it on any major retailer's shelves.

That said...

Since the author isn't selling this book in stores...

He's handing out a few copies at 50% OFF for you today.

Once you get access to this book you'll want to review it ASAP.

Nobody knows when the next major crisis will strike...

It could be something as big as another virus outbreak...

Or as "small" as a multi-day power outage in your neighborhood...

Either way, this book shows you how to be one of the few people who are totally ready.

Get your copy of The First 72 Hours for 50% OFF right here.











 
Often a combination of these is used. Among human beings, the sense of sight is usually in charge of recognizing other members of the same species, with maybe the subconscious help of smell. In particular, the human brain has a disproportionate amount of processing power dedicated to finely analyze the features of a human face. This is why most humans are able to distinguish human beings from one other (barring look-alikes), and a human being from a similar species like some anthropomorphic ape, with only a quick glance. Intra-species recognition systems are often subtle. For example, ornithologists have great difficulty in distinguishing the chiffchaff from the willow warbler by eye, and there is no evidence that the birds themselves can do so other than by the different songs of the male. Sometimes, intra-species recognition is fallible: in many species of frog, the males are commonly seen copulating with females of the wrong species or even with inanimate objects. Heliconius charithonia displays intra-species recognition by roosting with conspecifics. They do this with the help of UV rhodopsins in the eye that help them distinguish between ultra