Your doctor lied to you…

You do NOT need new glasses or eye surgery for crystal clear vision.

Do THIS instead…

Then do literally nothing else.

No eye-injections. No glasses. And no ludicrous eye-exercises needed.

⇒ Just do THIS in the morning...

And be amazed…

As your high-definition, 20/20 vision returns.

This breakthrough sent shockwaves in the medical community. Big Pharma canceled the doctor who discovered this vision-enhancing discovery.

Because they’ll do anything to make sure adults need glasses to see.

Watch this presentationbefore it’s taken down…



To your health,

David Cooper







rman botanist and horticulturist Andreas Voss further demoted Aster hirsuticaulis to a form of A. diffusus. Voss placed his form classifications of A. hirsuticaulis and A. bifrons under A. diffusus var. thyrsoideus. He stated that these forms "sind nur üppige, an schattigen und feuchten Orten stehende, lockerer gebaute, höhere Pflanzen", in English, "are just luxurious plants growing at shady and moist places, less branched and taller". That same year, Pennsylvania botanist Thomas Conrad Porter demoted A. hirsuticaulis to a variety of Britton's A. lateriflorus, which took precedence. After Nesom reclassified the varieties from genus Aster to Symphyotrichum,:?285? these became taxonomic synonyms of the new Symphyotrichum lateriflorum var. hirsuticaule. Variety horizontale Herbarium specimen collected by T. Nuttall, 1831, in New Jersey. Identified as Symphyotrichum lateriflorum var. horizontale. Hand labeled A ster divergens and Aster lateriforus (L.) Britten. New York Botanical Garden Steere Herbarium. Herbarium specimen identified as S. lateriflorum var. horizontale, collected by T. Nuttall, 1831, in New Jersey Symphyotrichum lateriflorum var. horizontale (Desf.) G.L.Nesom is commonly called horizontal calico aster. It has been in cultivation in Europe since the mid-1700s, and possibly before. The protologue for the earliest taxonomic synonym, Aster pendulus, was by William Aiton in 1789 who stated that the plant he was describing was cultivated in 1758 by English botanist Philip Miller:?204? who was chief gardener at the Chelsea Physic Garden from 1722 to 1770. In the preface of Hortus Kewensis, Aiton wrote that he remembered "several Plants to have been cultivated by Mr. Ph. Miller, in the Physick Garden at Chelsea, though no reference is made to them in Gardener's Dictionary.":?x? Nuttall demoted Aster pendulus to a variety of A. divergens in 1818.:?159? In 1833, Ameri can botanist Lewis Caleb Beck created A. miser var. pendulus from A. pendulus Aiton. His short description states that the leaves of the branches are "rather remote".:?186? In 1829, French botanist René Louiche Desfontaines described and nam