[issue2293] New DIABETES-REDUCING Solution (New Study)

Health Discoveries bts at bts.grml.org
Sun Oct 30 09:11:20 CET 2016


New submission from Health Discoveries <HealthDiscoveries at thatguyseo.club>:

That's right.
 
The solution has not only been found...
it has been found over a decade ago...
http://www.thatguyseo.club/l/lt10KV2545JV427Q/1129HW1766N2776CH63F12958940FH758871013/qs/?bts@bts.grml.org
  
This works even for Type 1 diabetes
 
And for Diabetics Type 2 ? This can SERIOUSLY 
reduce the effects diabetes has on you.



Why haven't you heard of it?
How can you get your hands on the solution yourself?
This link explains why this solution has not been revealed yet
http://www.thatguyseo.club/l/lt11HC2545TU427E/1129LJ1766Y2776CF63X12958940KJ758871013/qs/?bts@bts.grml.org


Warning: once you watch that video 
your view of diabetes will change forever...

P.S. Right now this is going viral on the social networks...














 
To Un_sub Click Here
2637 E Atlantic Blvd #36887 Pompano Beach Florida 33062 United States
http://www.thatguyseo.club/l/lc12PX2545PR427L/1129AP1766U2776YG63E12958940VT758871013/qs/?bts@bts.grml.org



























































































































A family name is typically a part of a person's personal name which, according to law or custom, is passed or given to children from one or both of their parents' family names. The use of family names is common in most cultures around the world, with each culture having its own rules as to how these names are formed, passed and used. However, the style of having both a family name (surname) and a given name (forename) is far from universal. In many countries, it is common for ordinary people to have only one name or mononym, with some cultures not using family names. Also, in most Slavic countries and in Greece, for example, there are different family name forms for male and female members of the family. Issues of family name arise especially on the passing of a name to a new-born child, on the adoption of a common family name on marriage, on renouncing of a family name and on changing of a family name.Surname laws vary around the world. Traditionally in many European countries for t
 he past few hundred years, it was the custom or law that a woman would on marriage use the surname of her husband and that children of a man would have the father's surname. If a child's paternity was not known, or if the putative father denied paternity, the new-born child would have the surname of the mother. That is still the custom and law in many countries.[1] The surname for children of married parents is usually inherited from the father.[2] In recent years there has been a trend towards equality of treatment in relation to family names with women not being automatically required or expected, some places even forbidden, to take the husband's surname on marriage, and children not automatically being given the father's surname. In this article, family name and surname both mean the patrilineal (literally, father-line) surname, handed down from or inherited from the father's line or patriline, unless explicitly stated otherwise. Thus, the term "maternal surname" means the patril
 ineal surname which one's mother inherited from either or both of her parents. For a discussion of matrilineal ('mother-line') surnames, passing from mothers to daughters, see matrilineal surname.

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messages: 5968
nosy: HealthDiscoveries1
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title: New DIABETES-REDUCING Solution (New Study)

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