Newsletter
All across the United States, men of all ages are restoring their boners and becoming bedroom beasts, using this strange cocktail.

It's a safe, natural herbal tea that was discovered in the Amazon jungle.

And it's fully legal.



So why is getting banned?

Simple. The boner pill industry is threatened by this tea.

They don't want guys to know about this secret.

Because if people found out there was a safe, legal, and delicious drink that would restore their manhood - and that doesn't cause heart failures or vision loss...

These disgraceful waste-of-human-flesh CEOs wouldn't sell a dime of little blue, yellow, or pink pills ever again.

The former FBI doctor who exposed this secret said it's one of the best things he's ever seen in his 30-plus year career.

An all-natural, 100% safe, 100% effective "little blue pill killer."

Get the complete recipe here
 


 

ok was originally published in 1881 and Jackson personally sent a copy of her book to every member of Congress, at her own expense. She hoped to awaken the conscience of the American people, and their representatives, to the flagrant wrongs that had been done to the American Indians, and persuade them "to redeem the name of the United States from the stain of a century of dishonor". After a long hiatus, the book was first reprinted in 1964 by Ross & Haines of Minneapolis, Minnesota via a limited printing of 2,000 copies. However, this was soon followed by a larger printing from Harper & Row in their Torchbook series in 1965, with an introductory essay by Andrew F. Rolle but without the fifteen documents that served as an appendix of supporting evidence in the original work and its first reprinting. Inspired by the women's movement of the 1970s, it was not until the 1980s that more extensive attention to Jackson and others like her began to appear in academic journals. Reception Critical response Initially, some critics, including President Theodore Roosevelt, dismissed her as being a "sentimental historian", which he did in the first appendix to The Winning of the West. However, more than a century later, historian John Milton Cooper Jr. countered Roosevelt's dismissal of Jackson's argument by stating that Roosevelt's view of Native American history was "Eurocentric, racist, male-dominated, and environmentally obtuse from a late-twentieth-century point of view." Over time, her work has been recognized for its important impact on the nation's understanding of the mistreatment of Native Americans by the United States and prompted discussion on the role of women's voices in history both publicly and academically. However, critics continue to refere