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Hey hey Patriot!

September is National Preparedness Month.

So it's the perfect time to ask yourself some questions, like...

"How much food do you have on hand for emergencies?"

"How would you get clean water if the tap went dry tomorrow?"

"What would you do if a storm knocked out the power for a week?"

If you're anything like me, there's some room for improvement on this stuff.

Luckily, our friends at MyPatriotSupply are making disaster preparedness easier and more affordable than ever...

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They just launched their Preparedness Month Mega Kit, and it includes a full year of Emergency food... a water filtration system that can purify almost any water source... a solar backup generator, and a LOT more.

And here's the best part: If you go to MYPATRIOTSUPPLY, you can get 90 preparedness essentials, totalling over fifteen hundred dollars, absolutely free.

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uroids do not look like other echinoderms at first glance, because of their tubular body, without visible skeleton nor hard appendixes. Furthermore, the fivefold symmetry, classical for echinoderms, although preserved structurally, is doubled here by a bilateral symmetry which makes them look like chordates. However, a central symmetry is still visible in some species through five 'radii', which extend from the mouth to the anus (just like for sea urchins), on which the tube feet are attached. There is thus no "oral" or "aboral" face as for sea stars and other echinoderms, but the animal stands on one of its sides, and this face is called trivium (with three rows of tube feet), while the dorsal face is named bivium. A remarkable feature of these animals is the "catch" collagen that forms their body wall.[Notes 1] This can be loosened and tightened at will, and if the animal wants to squeeze through a small gap, it can essentially liquefy its body and pour into the space. To keep itself safe in these crevices and cracks, the sea cucumber will hook up all its collagen fibers to make its body firm again. The most common way to separate the subclasses is by looking at their oral tentacles. Order Apodida have a slender and elongate body lacking tube feet, with up to 25 simple or pinnate oral tentacles. Aspidochirotida are the most common sea cucumbers encountered, with a strong body and 10 to 30 leaflike or shield-like oral tentacles. Dendrochirotida are filter-feeders, with plump bodies and eight to 30 br