Modern doctors should be EXPERTS in human parasites. This pisses me off. My wife works with super smart surgeons. Unfortunately, they're the only smart doctors these days and they're pretty brainwashed. We know you can change gene's on the fly in organisms now. I wouldn't doubt that a bunch of these "genetic diseases" we have are actually fucking bacteria that cause genetic changes in the body. Schizophrenic people tend to have foreign bacteria in their brains and they hear voices! LOL. Maybe bacteria are conscious beings in the "Etheric" realm (whatever the hell you call the weird place electricity seems to come from). The devil is decay, the lord of flies. Bacteria are devilish in that manner I suppose. But, the Human neuron is a bacteria technically. It creates light, and order the universe. It's not the devil.
Remember, Lord God wanted UNLEVENED bread on his altar. No yeast. Look at the link about the black yeast at the bottom of this.
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Wormwood (Artemisia absinthium) is a bitter herb found in Eurasia, North Africa, and North America. The plant has been used therapeutically since ancient times. In fact, the name “wormwood” comes from its traditional use as a means to cleanse the body of harmful organisms.
Does anyone know anything about "Saw dust rum"? it's Rum made from cellulose instead of the traditional parts of the plant. It may also have alchemical benefits to the body like Absinthe, I have to do more research on that.
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Check this out:
There are three major sources leading to mycoplasma contamination of cell cultures in the laboratory: infected cells sent from another lab; contaminated cell culture medium reagents such as serum and trypsin; and laboratory personnel infected with M. orale or M. fermentans.
Mycoplasma fermentans is a very small bacterium in the class Mollicutes. Like other mycoplasmas M. fermentans is characterized by the absence of a peptidoglycan cell wall and resulting resistance to many antibacterial agents. It is a possible human pathogen with roles suggested in many illness such as respiratory, genital, and rheumatoid diseases[2] among others. Investigations have focused on a possible link to it being a cofactor in HIV infection.
Mycoplasma orale is a small bacterium found in the class Mollicutes.[1] It belongs to the genus Mycoplasma, a well-known group of obligate intracellular parasites that inhabit humans.[2] It also is known to be an opportunistic pathogen in immunocompromised humans.[3] As with other Mycoplasma species, M. orale is not readily treated with many antibiotics due to its lack of a peptidoglycan cell wall.[4] Therefore, this species is relevant to the medical field as physicians face the task of treating patients suffering from infections with this microbe. It is characterized by a small physical size (0.1 micrometer in diameter on average), a small genome size, and a limited metabolism.[4][5][2] It is also known to frequently contaminate laboratory experiments.[5] This bacteria is very similar physiologically and morphologically to its sister species within the genus Mycoplasma; however, its recent discovery leaves many questions still unanswered about this microbe.
OMG, I wonder if that's why Absinthe is illegal.
So much evil in our system that must be expunged.
All I know is that absinthe makes the heart grow fonder.
🤣🤣🤣 Best laugh of the day!
I take Cinchona bark tea with honey. Good source of quinine. I also sprinkle fenbendazol on my porridge once a week.
Wormwood, the active ingredient, is perfectly legal. The rest is alcohol. One could mix it themselves. It doesn't make you hallucinate.
I used to gray market order it from Europe back in the day. It gives a unique perspective above the alcohol from my experience; a euphoria, and focus, but ya, not hallucinations. I haven't tried mixing it. I don't know if it would produce the same effect. Perhaps I should try it.
Had the same effects from my homemade absinthe, just has to sit and macerate for a time in grain alcohol.
Might be placebo because I take that stuff 3 times a day in pretty large doses when I'm on it, I haven't noticed any changed mental effects. The dreams can fuck off though, it gets too intense to the point where I wake up and don't know if it was real or a dream right after lol...
If you take it 3 times a day in pretty large doses, you probably have built up a tolerance to it and it would no longer have any effect.
Does Absinthe Make You Hallucinate?
No, absinthe does not make you hallucinate. The belief that absinthe causes hallucinations was started in large part by a 19th-century psychiatrist named Valentin Magnan. Magnan studied alcoholics and wrongly concluded that chronic absinthe drinkers had more serious health complications, such as hallucinations and seizures, than other chronic drinkers. He believed that wormwood oil, later specifically thujone, a compound in wormwood oil, caused these hallucinations and seizures.
Magnan’s conclusion, coupled with the rise of alcohol-blamed violence in the late 1800s and early 1900s and the alcohol’s overall bad reputation, caused absinthe production and consumption to be banned in many places around the world.
Recent studies, like this 2010 study from The Open Addiction Journal, have concluded that Magnan’s study and the link between absinthe and hallucinations are false. Any recorded hallucinogenic effects or seizures from absinthe were determined to be due to overconsumption, standard alcohol withdrawal or the absinthe being made with impure alcohol or toxic colorings.
Rest assured, absinthe won’t cause you to hallucinate or give you any side effects that differ from another type of alcohol.
So, Is Absinthe Legal in The US?
Yep. According to the United States’ Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, absinthe has been legal in the US for production and consumption since 2007, after a 95-year ban. While the TTB doesn’t have a legal definition of absinthe like it does for vodka, tequila or other types of alcohol, they do specify that absinthe in America contains “less than 10 parts per million of thujone” in accordance with FDA standards and that labels and advertisements for absinthe cannot contain imagery or wording that associates the product with “hallucinogenic, psychotropic or mind-altering effects.”
https://www.tasteofhome.com/article/what-is-absinthe/
I never said it made me hallucinate. On the contrary, I stated explicitly that it didn't. I said it caused a euphoria and a focus (like cocaine, only very mild). In my experience it acts as a stimulant. The experience with real absinthe is distinct from alcohol. Could it be placebo? It's not impossible, but I used to drink it fairly often (every few months we'd have an "absinthe" party after we got our ridiculously expensive bottles from Europe). If it was placebo, it was a damn good one and I highly recommend the experience.
The stuff that is worth a damn is illegal, as I stated.
As for all the reports like this, every single thing that has anything to do with herbs is to me completely suspicious, especially if it is regulated by the FDA. The FDA is a complete fraud (as in, you are almost better off believing the opposite of everything they say). The suppression of herbs and their effects is also a complete fraud and ubiquitous. After my research into the history of medicine and our regulatory agencies, everything is completely suspect but things like this quadrupoly so.
Relax, fren. I merely posted this to give others some data on Absinthe.
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I was not unrelaxed...
it isn't illegal any longer, some liquor stores have it
Just marketing though, it's neutered of its other properties
Isn't it only in super low wormwood concentration?
Probably, I made some once with dried Artemesia absinthum, so insanely bitter it destroyed friends tastebuds without piles of sugar.