Newsletter
Hi,

I don't know if you heard about this or not, but a "silent" war has just started among the big energy fat cats....

The secret they've kept suppressed for so many years has finally leaked:

There's panic everywhere... because once this secret goes out... there will be no point paying for energy bills anymore.

You won't hear about this on TVs, because we know who control them...

You have two options now:

#1 - ignore this email and let them steal money from you...again and again.

#2 - check out their dirty secret and do what's necessary to get rid of them.

Everything you need to know is here:
 






 
ation of the galah was difficult. It was separated in the monotypic genus Eolophus, but the further relationships were not clear. Obvious morphological similarities are shared between the galah and the white cockatoos that make up the genus Cacatua and indeed the galah was initially described as Cacatua roseicapilla. Early DNA studies allied the galah with the cockatiel or placed it close to some Cacatua species of completely different appearance. In consequence, the ancestors of the galah, the cockatiel and Major Mitchell's cockatoo were thought to have diverged from the main white cockatoo line at some stage prior to that group's main radiation; this was indeed correct except for the placement of the cockatiel. Ignorance of this fact, however, led to attempts to resolve the evolutionary history and prehistoric biogeography of the cockatoos, which ultimately proved fruitless because they were based on invalid assumptionssuch as what?[example needed] to start with.[citation needed] It fell to the study of Brown & Toft (1999) to compare the previously available data with their mitochondrial 12S rRNA sequence to resolve the issue. Today, the galah is seen, along with Major Mitchell's cockatoo, as an early divergence from the white cockatoo lineage, which has not completely lost its ability to produce an overall pink (Major Mitchell's) or pink and grey (galah) body plumage, while already being light in colour and non-sexually dimorphic. The significance of these two (and other) characteristics shared by the Cacatuinae had previously been explained away in earlier studies by strict application of parsimony on misinterp