Survivalist Pro
Photo: Pixabay
Examples of the best non-lethal self-defense weapons include: Pepper Spray. Personal Alarms. Stun Guns and Tasers. Tactical Whips. Steel Batons. Tactical Pen. Baseball Bats. Emergency Whistles.
Lemons. Lemons have been widely regarded in the health industry as the world's healthiest food. The sour fruit is an alkalising powerfood; they...
Read More »
The FAA allows you to carry an unloaded Byrna in your checked luggage. This is specifically permitted under the exception afforded to “Compressed...
Read More »You may have noticed by now that certain media companies are more interested in scaring you than informing you. Maybe that’s why people are often surprised to learn that despite the threat of mass shootings and terrorist attacks, the country is much, much safer in 2022 than it was in previous decades. Starting in the mid-90s, the United States has seen violent crime rates fall by 50%. Though many people still carry self-defense weapons here in New York City, the streets are actually lightyears safer than they were in the early 90s and 80s.
The four key indicators are: Nature, Intensity, Complexity and Unpredictability. Feb 15, 2019
Read More »
The 70/30 rule. Here's how it goes: weight loss is 70 percent the foods you eat, and 30 percent exercise. Therefore, it's not scientifically...
Read More »
Adventure games were some of the earliest games created, beginning with the text adventure Colossal Cave Adventure in the 1970s. That game was...
Read More »
Elon Musk's donation of 5 million shares of Tesla, worth $5.7 billion, will do a lot of good. Sep 14, 2022
Read More »
“Most experts will tell you tap water has a shelf-life of six months,” Satterfield says. Aug 13, 2014
Read More »
Victims and their families — like all of us — need food, shelter, health care, and other essential resources to survive.
Read More »
Microsoft does not go into detail on its mental arithmetic here, but does note elswhere in its comments that PlayStation currently has a console...
Read More »
3 minutes The general consensus is that people can survive for around three days without water, with estimates typically ranging from two days to a...
Read More »