We’re happy to tell you we’ve paid the Full Price of American Tactical Supply’s new “invisible” Shoulder Holster for you.

So you can own one of the 382 available Shoulder Holsters for FREE!

Just click here to claim your complimentary Shoulder Holster today.

We’re doing this as a “No More Gun Control” awareness campaign -- and to give a big ol’ middle finger to Biden’s surge of insane new gun laws.

This is our #1 favorite holster.

It fits nearly all handguns...

It’s unbelievably comfortable...

And it’s so good at concealing guns… it can make a large frame pistol disappear in plain sight.

Plus, the fact you can get it for $0.00 today is a huge selling point.

The only problem is that there are a limited number available to give away.

Once they’re gone, you can still get one… but you’ll have to pay full price.

Right now, there are enough Free Shoulder Holsters for the next 382 people who request on here.

After that, we can’t make any promises.

So HURRY and grab your Free Shoulder Holster now, before it’s too late.


K.Jenkins



























asitism is a major aspect of evolutionary ecology; for example, almost all free-living animals are host to at least one species of parasite. Vertebrates, the best-studied group, are hosts to between 75,000 and 300,000 species of helminths and an uncounted number of parasitic microorganisms. On average, a mammal species hosts four species of nematode, two of trematodes, and two of cestodes. Humans have 342 species of helminth parasites, and 70 species of protozoan parasites. Some three-quarters of the links in food webs include a parasite, important in regulating host numbers. Perhaps 40 percent of described species are parasitic. Fossil record Parasitism is hard to demonstrate from the fossil record, but holes in the mandibles of several specimens of Tyrannosaurus may have been caused by Trichomonas-like parasites. Coevolution Further information: Host–parasite coevolution As hosts and parasites evolve together, their relationships oft en change. When a parasite is in a sole relationship with a host, selection drives the relationship to become more benign, even mutualistic, as the parasite can reproduce for longer if its host lives longer. But where parasites are competing, selection favours the parasite that reproduces fastest, leading to increased virulence. There are thus varied possibilities in host–parasite coevolution. Evolutionary epidemiology analyses how parasites spread and evolve, whereas Darwinian medicine applies similar evolutionary thinkin