Friday, 2 February 2024

Japanese Tonic: 57LB Loss, Tops Ozempic


A rogue whistleblowing doctor from Japan just revealed the sickening truth behind Ozempic...

>> See it for yourself right here (before it's censored)



Not only did the creators of these injectable drugs STEAL the Ozempic formula from a town buried deep in the Japanese Alps...

They also LIED about the disturbing side effects...

Meaning that thousands of women and men are walking around like ticking time bombs...

All because they don't yet know what happens the minute you STOP the injections....

When you see this video...be prepared to be shocked, even ANGRY....

But the good news is you don't need to inject yourself with a side-effect filled drug...

See, there's a Japanese natural version that's 93% more powerful and with none of the side effects...

And it's something you can easily make at home...

As long as you have some water and a few items from your pantry:

>> Japanese Alpine Tonic Burns 57LBs of thick flab (93% more powerful than Ozempic)

To your good health,





vers are pale brown above and white below, with a white band on the hind neck and a smudgy eyestripe (absent in the South American subspecies). Breeding males have black patches behind the eye ("ear patch"), on the sides of the neck, and on the forehead. In males, the crown may be reddish at the start of the breeding season. The breeding female is slightly duller, and typically one or more of the patches are partly or completely brown. The neck patches on each side are well separated and rarely joined at the front, giving the appearance of a "broken" breast band in contrast to the continuous breast band in many other plovers. Outside the breeding season, the neck and ear patches are pale and the forehead patch is absent, and plumages of males and females cannot be distinguished. Newly hatched chicks have pale upper sides with brown to black spots and are white below.[8][17] Similar species within its range include the piping plover, the collared plover, the semipalmated plover, and Wilson's plover. Amongst other features, the snowy plover differs from these species in its slender and entirely black bill (shorter and thicker in piping plover and longer and thicker in Wilson's plover, and with orange base in piping and breeding semipalmated plover), in its gray to black legs (orange or yellow in piping, collared, and semipalmated plover), and the "broken" breast band (usually complete in semipalmated, Wilson's, and breeding collared plovers).[8][18] Vocalizations Dickcissel male perched on a metal pole singing, with neck stretched and beak open. Songs and calls Listen to the snowy plover on xeno-canto The typical call is a repeated "tu-wheet" given in a wide range of contexts.[8][16] In males, these include advertisement while standing in territories and courtship. In both sexes, the call may be given in situations of threat, aggression, distress, and alarm. This call differs between sexes, being shorter, quieter, and hoars











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