Main contents

Archive for the 'Training' Category

An introduction to Every Monday Matters

January 5th, 2009

every-monday-matters2

Today marks the launch of a new initiative by the Young Britons’ Foundation – the publication of the first instalment of Every Monday Matters. Here YBF Chief Executive, Donal Blaney, introduces Every Monday Matters. Later today, Chapter One will be published on this site – so be sure to return later today!

Being a young conservative activist can be a lonely and unrewarding experience.

Often young activists will find themselves persecuted for their conservative views by schoolteachers or university lecturers. Booking facilities can become difficult. So can accessing funds.

Sometimes they will even be shunned by those they once considered to be their friends. Conservative students’ academic grades may suffer, as may their social lives. Standing up for freedom certainly isn’t an easy route to popularity.

I first became politically active while at school. It was a rite of passage for sixth form pupils at Tonbridge (as traditional a public school as one could imagine that still had fagging as late as 1992) that they should become trendy lefties rebelling against the life of parent-funded privilege that had been theirs hitherto. And yet in my final year I was one of half-a-dozen or so pupils who were proud to stand up for conservative values.

I would literally preach conservatism from the pulpit – even to the extent of having a fatwa pronounced against me by one Islamic pupil! I stood in the 1992 mock general election as the Conservative Party candidate (and won handsomely). With friends who have gone on to successful careers as entrepreneurs, journalists and in the City, but with whom I remain close, I helped hijack a European Conference Day that was devised to force-feed pro-EU propaganda down the throats of 250 or so pupils by ensuring my fellow students heard both sides of the European debate. While at school I proudly joined both the Conservative Party but, first, the Campaign for an Independent Britain.

At Southampton University I was fortunate to join a flourishing Conservative Students branch led by Conor Burns, now the parliamentary candidate for Bournemouth West. Conor invited the majority of the then Conservative cabinet to speak at Southampton and I was privileged to meet and speak to a host of leading figures from the 1980s and 1990s as diverse as Keith Joseph, Ted Heath, Enoch Powell, Douglas Hurd, John Redwood, Patrick Mayhew, Michael Portillo, Peter Brooke and Peter Lilley. At the same time as my fellow students and I were being exposed at packed speaker meetings to these leading Tory figures, I became heavily involved in the students’ union. Eventually we managed to take control, reducing spending on wasteful politically correct hobbyhorses of the left and instead delivering cost-effective services for the benefit of ordinary students.

Conservatism at Southampton University had a powerful voice in the mid-1990s. It may not have been to everyone’s tastes – that’s for sure – but it was undoubtedly effective, so much so that the Vice-Chancellor of the University summoned me for a bollocking for destabilizing the students’ union. I had begun a campaign for the removal of the students’ union’s most senior member of staff after he had been described as “deceitful and disloyal” in an Employment Tribunal judgment arising out of an illicit affair he had had with a bar manageress. I had been told to drop my campaign by a University official because the students’ union staff member was “one of us”: needless to say I declined to be party to such a cover-up.

After being Chairman of both Southampton University Conservative Association and Wessex Area Conservative Students (and standing unsuccessfully to become National Chairman of the Conservative Students), I was brought onto the committee of the National Association of Conservative Graduates by Daniel Hannan – now a prominent Member of the European Parliament. After organizing a European Conference and editing the NACG monthly journal, Ocean Blue, I was elected Chairman. NACG ran a series of successful monthly debates at Kettners in Soho – including one memorable debate on the Arts addressed by Peter Stringfellow, the impresario Raymond Gubbay and art critic Brian Sewell.

In 1998, William Hague united the Conservative Graduates, Conservative Students and Young Conservatives together to form a new youth organization – Conservative Future. I was appointed its first Chairman. The main achievement of my year as Chairman – apart from keeping my cool live on Today when Anna Ford opined that all young conservatives were racists while interviewing me – was to keep three previously warring factions together at all. Until then it had been the bane of our lives that the Thatcherite YCs wouldn’t hand over membership data to the more pro-EU Conservative Students leadership who, in turn, wouldn’t hand over their data to the more libertarian NACG. As a result, thousands of conservatives who could have gone on to contribute to the conservative cause were lost.

I lost my re-election bid in 1999, thanks to the guerilla campaign led by Andre Walker (for which I am, as you know Andre, eternally grateful). By then I had been elected as a local councillor in the London Borough of Hammersmith & Fulham alongside Greg Hands, now the Member of Parliament for the parliamentary seat encompassing much of that borough. Adopting the campaign tactics pioneered and perfected by Andrew Rosindell when he was a local councillor in Havering (prior to winning the Romford parliamentary seat in 2001), Greg and I managed to out-liberal the Liberals. We won Eel Brook ward on a 15% swing at the nadir of Tory fortunes in 1998. While now Hammersmith & Fulham is the leading Conservative local authority in the country thanks to the leadership of Stephen Greenhalgh, 11 years ago it was Labour-led and weakly opposed by a compliant and ageing Conservative group.

In January 2001 I attended my first Conservative Political Action Conference in Arlington, Virginia. Having attended Conservative Party Conference every year since 1993, I thought I knew what to expect. But after hearing from Benjamin Netanyahu, Jesse Helms, Chief Buthelezi, Charlton Heston and Dick Cheney all at one dinner, it became apparent to me that the approach the Conservative Party had adopted in Britain was, to put it mildly, outdated.

At CPAC I came across a number of organizations that shaped my political outlook and inspired the creation of the Young Britons’ Foundation two years later – the Leadership Institute, the Young America’s Foundation and the Heritage Foundation. All three organizations had multi-million dollar budgets and substantial staffs. All were respected and feared by their opponents. All effectively and persuasively sold the conservative message to voters. The repeated successes of the Republican Party from 1980 onwards were owed, in no small measure, to the organizations led with such distinction by Morton Blackwell, Ron Robinson and Ed Feulner respectively. I have little doubt that the LI, YAF and Heritage will be at the forefront of the reinvigoration of conservatism in America in the coming years.

It was blindingly obvious to me that we needed our own Leadership Institute in Britain to train young activists. We needed an organization that would do the work of the Young America’s Foundation too – nobody was standing up to leftists effectively on campuses in Britain. Someone should set up such groups in Britain, I said.

But who?

And how?

My time as a councillor convinced me that I did not want to seek election to the House of Commons. My calling was to help identify, train, mentor and place the next generation of conservative activists in politics, academia and the media. I wanted to help young conservatives campaign effectively in schools, colleges and universities for a balanced education and to help redress the bias in our nation’s education system. With two younger colleagues, Ben Pickering and Greg Smith (who is now in the cabinet on Hammersmith & Fulham Council), the Young Britons’ Foundation was born and officially launched at the Young America’s Foundation National Conservative Student Conference (CSC) in July 2003.

Since then, YBF has trained over 1,000 activists in areas such as public speaking, debating, campaigning, fundraising and media skills. Many of those YBF has trained have gone on to become parliamentary candidates, local councillors, political researchers and journalists. Others have gone on to successful careers in the City, the professions and in business – from where they are already supporting conservative causes. YBF has helped overturn bans on the military from having a presence at universities, campaigns for the Anglo-American Special Relationship, and is increasing student awareness of the perils of the EU’s seemingly inexorable march towards a United States of Europe.

My grounding as a conservative activist as school and university – coupled with my roles leading the Conservative Graduates and Conservative Future – have helped me develop the experience that I believe I am able usefully to pass on to today’s student activists. They are able not only to learn from my successes – but more importantly, to learn from my many mistakes. And there were many, trust me!

Why Every Monday Matters

Every Monday Matters is a week-by-week battle plan for young conservative activists. Initially published every Monday on the Young Britons’ Foundation website (www.ybf.org.uk), Every Monday Matters will be published in hardcopy form in the Spring. It will help equip young conservatives with the weaponry, ideas and mindset necessary to take on and defeat those who have ridden roughshod over the rights of those with whom they disagree so violently for too long.

George Bernard Shaw once remarked that “if you teach a man anything he will never learn”. Dale Carnegie, author of the seminal text on human relations, How to Win Friends & Influence People, observed that “learning is an active process; we learn by doing”.

For Every Monday Matters to be the success that I want it to be, the many young conservative activists who read its weekly chapters will need to take the steps recommended. The steps are designed to be eminently achievable by those who are on their own as well by those who are fortunate enough to be part of a vibrant group.

Not every recommended step will be appropriate to every activist. Some may even be wholly inappropriate given local circumstances. But the goal of Every Monday Matters is to encourage young conservative activists to be proactive activists. Time is not on our side. Tony Blair and Gordon Brown have destroyed many of the achievements of Margaret Thatcher and John Major, not least our once flourishing economy. Millions are dependent on welfare. Our liberties are steadily being eroded. Our national sovereignty is being handed over to Brussels by stealth.

It is all too easy for young conservatives – and indeed more seasoned activists – to expect the tide to be reversed by our national leaders. That may well happen. Only time will tell. But in the meantime it is incumbent on every conservative activist, regardless of age, to do everything within his or her power to advance the agenda as effectively as possible at their level.

Every Monday Matters will help young conservatives do just that. It will help young activists look themselves in the mirror and answer positively when asking themselves whether they did all that they could to advance the agenda effectively that week.

Every Monday Matters has been written because every week truly does matter. Every week presents a new opportunity to advance the cause of freedom in schools, colleges and universities up and down the country. Many activists may already have their own week-by-week vision mapped out clearly. Every Monday Matters will hopefully complement that vision. But for those who are willing to receive suggestions from outside the confines of their school, college or university, Every Monday Matters will, I hope, become a useful road map and reference tool.

Now let’s get cracking…

Posted in Training | 2 Comments »

Campaign Tips: Proactive Activism

September 5th, 2008

This week’s Campaign Tip is more of an encouragement to adopt what the Young America’s Foundation call “the Reagan Approach” to campaigning. Instead of being a “passive activist”, YAF encourages students to become “proactive activists”. Thus instead of whining about how awful your degree course, students’ union or the media are, you are encouraged to get off your backside and DO something about it!

So in that spirit, today I encourage you to adopt the same approach to activism. We are to become “proactive activists” – and the first campaign will be to attack the BBC for its astonishing bias over the US presidential election campaign. The contrast between last week’s coverage of the Democratic Party Convention in Denver and this week’s coverage of the GOP Convention in St Paul is astonishing. So here’s a way to get off your backsides and to campaign hard against the Barack Broadcasting Corporation.

Posted in Training | No Comments »

Public Speaking & Debating Tips: Nerves

September 3rd, 2008

A major reason people don’t enjoy giving speeches or speaking in public is because they suffer from nerves. Seeing Alaska Governor Sarah Palin speak last weekend when she was nominated by John McCain, it would be hard to think that she was nervous – but I bet she was. She just knew how to handle her nerves! Here are some tips for dealing with nerves:

  1. Saying “er” or “um” are irritating. The bond of trust with the audience is broken. If you feel the urge to say “er” or “um”, pause and use silence instead. Practice this in every day speech until it becomes second nature.
  2. If you are not pumping with adrenaline before you speak, you may be suffering from complacency. Harold Macmillan used to be physically sick before Prime Minister’s Questions. It’s ok to feel nervous!
  3. The better prepared you are, the less likely you are to feel nervous. If you leave anything to the last minute or worse, to chance, this will only make you feel nervous. Eliminate as many uncertainties as you can before you start.
  4. Walk slowly and purposefully towards the lectern (if there is one). Breathe deeply and take time to adjust your posture. If you exhibit confidence, the audience will be receptive.
  5. Once at the lectern, adjust the microphone. Survey your audience, make eye contact. Get your notes ready. Breathe. Pause before you begin.
  6. Radiate a sense of warmth, caring, sincerity and credibility. If you project a sense of liking yourself, your audience will like you too.
  7. If it all goes wrong, it’s not the end of the world. Nobody will have died. Keep things in perspective and resolve to learn from any avoidable mistakes.

Posted in Training | No Comments »

Print & Broadcast Media Tips: The Ten B’s (Part Two)

September 1st, 2008

Following on from last week’s post identifying the first five of the Ten B’s, here are the remaining five:

6. Be In Control: you have 0% control over what you are asked but 100% control over what comes out of your mouth. Learn how to work key phrases back in time and time again. Use short lists when trying to convert a complex issue into a digestible explanation. 

7. Be Liked: Reagan achieved what Goldwater could not because people liked him. People remember how they felt about you more than what you said. Do not sound official, pompous or mean-spirited. Remember the real message: you!

8. Be Innovative: always think like a journalist. Think how you can catch their attention. Avoid press conferences and instead create media events. If there is a national story, find a local angle so as to secure coverage.

9. Be Assertive: it is called “earned media” for a reason – you have to be proactive! If a reporter is biased or has a slant, forcefully volunteer information and counter-quotes – but only complain as a last resort. 

10. Be Sensible: what constitutes “news” is relative. It depends what else is going on (just ask Jo Moore, who thought 9/11 was a good day “to bury bad news”). Use slow news days, such as weekends or the month of August, to your advantage.

Posted in Training | No Comments »

Campaign Tips: Opposition Research

August 29th, 2008

Last week we explained what opposition research really involves. This week we look at the seven deadly sins of incumbents – the key points to consider when conducting research when you or the candidate you support is challenging an incumbent office holder.

  1. Casting bad votes/missing votes: research how your opponent voted on a controversial or important local issue. Don’t just look at the title of the vote, research the substance of the motion. You might find that your opponent did a John Kerry – voting for something before voting against it. And make sure you look at votes that your opponent missed – is he lazy too?
  2. Taking trips at taxpayers’ expense: while some trips are necessary, are all of them? Overseas junkets or where your opponent travels first class and stays at a five star hotel are always newsworthy. It may even explain why he missed votes.
  3. Voting for his own pay rise: voters hate to see politicians lining their own pockets when the rest of us cannot usually give ourselves pay increases. Particularly check if he said one thing and did another. But double check that he isn’t the family’s sole breadwinner, has infirm aged parents or is struggling to care for a disabled child.
  4. Voting for higher or new taxes: people know they are over-taxed. If you can paint your opponent as a high-tax politician in today’s climate, that will help your campaign. Pay particular attention to wasteful, unpopular or inefficient programmes and projects.
  5. Not living in the constituency: this increasingly matters. The days of a Ted Heath living in Salisbury and representing a seat in Kent are long gone. If your opponent is not local, point this out. But make sure you live locally yourself!
  6. Becoming involved in scandal: financial and sexual scandals ruin an increasing number of political careers. While they can be overridden (Ted Kennedy survived Chappaquiddick, Bill Clinton survived the Lewinsky affair), usually they prove fatal. The key is the timing of the deployment of your research.
  7. Repeating any of the above: voters know politicians aren’t saints. But if someone is a repeat offender, this can suggest a lack of judgment – as David Blunkett and Peter Mandelson found out to their cost.

All campaigns need opposition research to be undertaken. Those that do not are risking failure. Those that do it badly are risking embarrassment. If you would like help with your campaign’s opposition research, YBF will be able to help. Email info@ybf.org.uk for further information.

Posted in Training | No Comments »

Public Speaking & Debating Tips: Repeat Ad Nauseam

August 27th, 2008

One of the most effective tactics adopted by great orators is to repeat their best lines. I don’t mean that they should cut and paste excerpts of speeches or, worse, do as Joe Biden did and plagiarise others’ speeches. But if a public figure has a line that resonates with voters, he or she shouldn’t be afraid of using it – rather like a catchphrase. Ronald Reagan frequently said: “You ain’t seen nothin’ yet”, Bill Clinton reminded voters “It’s the economy, stupid” and Barack Obama tells his supporters: “Yes we can”. In Britain, David Cameron frequently returns to “Share the proceeds of growth” while Tony Blair extolled “Education, education, education” and promised to be “Tough on crime, tough on the causes of crime”.

The ability to return to themes that inspire supporters was shown this week by Senator Ted Kennedy, the liberal lion of the US Senate who is dying of brain cancer. Hearkening back to his unsuccessful 1980 campaign for the Democratic nomination (and his powerful podium speech at the 1980 Democratic Convention), Kennedy repeated the refrain from that powerful 1980 speech. Many in the room wouldn’t have picked up on the technique – they were simply inspired to hear from one of their party’s big beasts, particularly in his current condition. But seasoned observers knew what Kennedy was doing. He was laying claim, on behalf of the Kennedy clan, to the likely Obama victory in November. If or when Obama wins, Kennedy acolytes will say, he owed his victory in part to the vision of the soon-to-be departed Senator from Massachusetts.

Posted in Training | No Comments »

Print & Broadcast Media Tips: The Ten B’s

August 25th, 2008

Every Monday we will focus on Print & Broadcast Media Tips – beginning this week with The Ten B’s to bear in mind when dealing with the media.

  1. Be Realistic: the press is not your PR machinery! It faces time and space limitations. Before you peddle news to journalists, try to think like a journalist. Does the story have a human interest angle? Is it genuinely relevant to the newspaper’s readers? Or is it parochial and irrelevant?
  2. Be Prepared: make sure you know who the editors and reporters are! You must also only ever give an interview when you are ready – if you need time, ask for the reporter’s deadline, tell him you need to collect information, offer to get back to him at a certain and then make sure you do so. If you upset a journalist, be prepared for the consequences…
  3. Be Accessible: media relations is about human relations. You should never simply say “no comment” as this suggests you are hiding something. Explain why you cannot comment, discuss general policy instead of specifics and/or switch the topic to something you can say.
  4. Be Honest: never lie to a journalist. Ever. If you have bad news, admit it and move on to corrective action. Lying will come back to haunt you. Just as Bill “I-did-not-have-sexual-relations-with-that-woman” Clinton.
  5. Be Quotable: if you are dull journalists will not come back to talk to you again. Make your quotes memorable. Put your issues into plain English in a way that connects with voters. Rather than giving an unmemorable quote because you are in a hurry, delay putting out your message so that it is properly crafted.

The next five of The Ten B’s will be revealed next Monday. Make sure you bookmark this website in the meantime!

Posted in Training | 1 Comment »

viagra ou similar cialis generika billig pastilla levitra cialis preisvergleich viagra rezeptfrei frankreich cialis requiere receta medica cialis 10 mg precio kamagra kaufen berlin comprar cialis 10 mg cialis rezept kamagra billiger original viagra bestellen vendo viagra antofagasta viagra generika gefährlich viagra tabletten kaufen levitra 20 mg precio kamagra tabletten erfahrungen comprar viagra em portugal viagra en farmacias viagra aus indien online viagra kaufen viagra kaufen in münchen cialis generika kaufen viagra generika vergleich viagra apothekenpreis viagra bestellen schweiz cialis preisliste venta viagra generica super kamagra apotheke foro cialis cialis online apotheke viagra preise türkei viagra kaufen privat cialis apotheke holland cialis rezeptfrei bestellen cialis verschreibungspflichtig cialis in österreich kaufen compra cialis españa viagra kaufen erfahrungen cialis im internet bestellen viagra bestellen in deutschland levitra generika kamagra oral jelly preis viagra holland ohne rezept kamagra tabletten viagra generico comprar rezeptfrei viagra kaufen tadalafil generico españa viagra bestellen forum viagra generika test kamagra oral jelly billig kamagra wien cialis rezeptfrei kaufen precio viagra generico viagra pfizer kaufen viagra billig online kaufen levitra rezeptfrei holland comprar levitra sin receta precios viagra cialis berlin viagra pille preis levitra ohne rezept kaufen generische viagra viagra in holland kaufen cialis precios viagra apotheke holland viagra einzeln kaufen venta viagra españa comprar viagra españa levitra tabletten comprar viagra por internet cialis comprimidos cialis preis schweiz cialis kaufen österreich cialis rezeptpflichtig viagra generika günstig cialis kaufen paypal viagra cialis rezeptfrei viagra preis österreich levitra espana viagra rezeptfrei günstig viagra preiswert kamagra ajanta vardenafil generika venta levitra viagra rezept kosten viagra torte rezept viagra generika unterschied viagra online bestellen ohne rezept comprar viagra pela net tadalafil colombia comprar cialis 20 mg cialis apothekenpreis sildenafil tabletten kamagra nachnahme sildenafil apotheke cialis original kaufen levitra günstig kaufen viagra 50 mg preis vendo cialis generico cialis espana viagra ohne rezept erfahrungen original levitra rezeptfrei viagra rezeptfrei in österreich viagra farmacias del ahorro kamagra gel viagra original günstig viagra generico el mejor afrodisiaco cialis generika 20mg viagra rezeptfrei erfahrungsberichte viagra online ohne rezept generico tadalafil viagra kaufen medicamento levitra preisvergleich viagra 100 mg precio levitra viagra generika 100 mg levitra generico comprar levitra filmtabletten 20mg viagra per internet viagra 50 mg kaufen cialis tadalafil kaufen günstig viagra kaufen viagra donde comprar cialis mas barato viagra rezeptfrei per nachnahme tadalafil tabletten viagra rezeptfrei schweiz generic tadalafil generika viagra im internet bestellen strafbar comprar levitra generico pfizer viagra kaufen online viagra und cialis kaufen kaufen cialis similares tadalafil venta viagra barcelona viagra wo kaufen cialis generico foro viagra ohne rezept apotheke cialis wo bestellen kamagra österreich precio viagra españa viagra ersatzmittel günstig viagra viagra precios farmacia viagra se vende en farmacias cialis levitra comparison kamagra precio viagra versand schweiz generika tadalafil cialis kamagra madrid cialis rezeptpflicht levitra receta viagra mit rezept viagra preise in deutschland viagra generika kaufen cialis niederlande versand viagra viagra generica funciona cialis generika nebenwirkungen viagra te koop compra cialis generico viagra alternative precio farmacia viagra cialis 5mg filmtabletten preisvergleich pillenpharm viagra venta de tadalafil viagra por internet tadalafil ohne rezept tschechien viagra viagra generika erfahrungsberichte precio viagra argentina viagra online bestellen erfahrungen viagra preise apotheke günstig kamagra cialis generika aus europa viagra venta libre cialis se vende sin receta cialis rezeptfrei aus deutschland viagra kaufen in apotheke cialis preiswert viagra apothekenpflichtig viagra alternativ erectie middelen cialis similares cialis billig kamagra deutschland sildenafil generika precios cialis generieke viagra comprar viagra por correo apotheke online viagra holland apotheke viagra foro kamagra cialis resultados viagra kaufen in berlin cialis generika erfahrungen cialis per nachnahme cialis kaufen rezeptfrei viagra rezeptfrei in deutschland levitra verschreibungspflichtig tadalafilo viagra rezeptfrei online viagra bestellen ohne rezept kamagra oral jelly bestellen viagra rezeptfrei rechnung viagra kaufen usa viagra rezeptfrei preisvergleich nebenwirkungen cialis generika cialis generika preiswert kamagra sabores sildenafil citrat tabletten comprar cialis por internet comprar viagra generica generika sildenafil cialis 20mg filmtabletten preis kosten viagra rezept versandapotheke cialis pastillas levitra viagra aus holland cialis 20mg filmtabletten bestellen vardenafil preis cialis rezeptfrei schweiz levitra mit rezept kamagra online levitra online bestellen cialis generico paypal tadalafil diario precio viagra 100 mg original cialis bestellen viagra pillen shop comprar vardenafil vendo viagras kamagra kautabletten precio viagra pillendienst viagra viagra generika shop levitra rezeptfrei schweiz viagra pillenpharm kamagra lutschtabletten viagra auf rezept viagra farmacias ahumada viagra deutschland kaufen preis viagra kaufen cialis preiswert kaufen viagra barato generico do viagra billiger viagra cialis generico venta viagra preisliste viagra medicamento viagra kaufen mit rezept günstig viagra bestellen cialis presentacion y precio viagra schweiz cialis preise türkei cialis 5mg rezeptfrei viagra rezeptpflichtig viagra schweiz rezeptfrei generika tadalafil preis viagra apotheke cialis rezeptfrei in holland viagra billigst viagra nur mit rezept viagra es de venta libre viagra für die frau bestellen cialis necesita receta medica levitra 20mg rezeptfrei potenzmittel kamagra günstig cialis kaufen viagra kaufen billig viagra per nachnahme bestellen comprar cialis por telefono viagra barcelona viagra rezeptfrei online bestellen viagra woman bestellen cialis precio oficial cialis alternative levitra per nachnahme medicamento cialis kamagra oral jelly günstig viagra usa kaufen pastillas cialis comprar cialis cialis seriös kaufen generico viagra españa levitra 20 mg preisvergleich cialis generika rezept erectiepil tabletten cialis comprar viagra barato venta viagra españa levitra preisvergleich kamagra oral jelly apotheke cialis versand viagra 50mg rezeptfrei legal viagra kaufen cialis günstig bestellen viagra cialis levitra generika viagra 100mg preis viagra generika indien viagra ventajas y desventajas viagra rezeptfrei bestellen venta de levitra viagras genericos venta cialis generico kamagra wo bestellen bestellen viagra super kamagra bestellen potenzmittel levitra kaufen tadalafil foro precio cialis cialis preis deutschland viagra tablette preise cialis viagra kaufen ohne rezept levitra foro tadalafil en chile levitra similares levitra generika forum precio levitra 10 mg cialis holland kamagra per nachnahme viagra kosten mit rezept original cialis rezeptfrei levitra billig kaufen kamagra in holland viagra original rezeptfrei cialis internetapotheke levitra apotheke tabletas cialis cialis kaufen online comprar viagra sin receta en barcelona kamagra rezept kamagra soft tabletten cialis generica viagra online kaufen rezeptfrei kamagra versand viagra generika nebenwirkung cialis aus indien cialis preço cialis generika eu viagra blitzversand viagra ohne rezept legal tadalafil generico mexico super kamagra kaufen viagra apotheke rezept viagra natural venta viagra niederlande super kamagra billig cialis barato cialis necesita receta