Newsletter
As you know, having clean water is a massive priority in any emergency.

That's why we want to show you how to get a 1-Year Supply of clean water today - for pennies per gallon.

This survival water will also never expire... and believe it or not, you can actually carry it with you anywhere... even in your pocket!

How is that possible?

Simple.

It's all thanks to these Ready filter water straws - which are available HALF OFF today.

Each of these filters gives you over 396 gallons of clean water (that's enough to hydrate one person for a whole year)... but they're small enough to fit in the palm of your hand.

And here are 6 more reasons these tiny filters are awesome: Like we said...

These incredibly little survival tools are being offered 50% OFF today.

And while the company who makes them promises they'll work to continue giving you the best price possible...

The price you see today is likely the lowest you'll ever be offered...

So grab one today at the lowest price possible!

Get your Ready Filter water straw (capable of giving you 396 gallons of clean water) for HALF OFF right here.

Owen



 
ry connection between one's conviction that X ought to be done and one's motivation to do X. Conversely, the motivational externalist (or moral externalist) claims that there is no necessary internal connection between moral convictions and moral motives. That is, there is no necessary connection between the conviction that X is wrong and the motivational drive not to do X. (The use of these terms has roots in W.D. Falk's (1947) paper "'Ought' and Motivation"). These views in moral psychology have various implications. In particular, if motivational internalism is true, then amorality is unintelligible (and metaphysically impossible). An amoralist is not simply someone who is immoral, rather it is someone who knows what the moral things to do are, yet is not motivated to do them. Such an agent is unintelligible to the motivational internalist, because moral judgments about the right thing to do have built into them corresponding motivations to do those things that are judged by the agent to be the moral things to do. On the other hand, an amoralist is entirely intelligible to the motivational externalist, because the motivational externalist thinks that moral judgm