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Atropa Belladonna (Scopolamine producer)

Deadly nightshade is tied to the occult, and big pharma, and Genesis 3.




Ezekiel 47:12 "And by the river upon the bank thereof, on this side and on that side, shall grow all trees for meat, whose leaf shall not fade, neither shall the fruit thereof be consumed: it shall bring forth new fruit according to his months, because their waters they issued out of the sanctuary: and the fruit thereof shall be for meat, and the leaf thereof for medicine."
Note: This page is under construction. It's like the death star, hasn't been completed yet. Check back, and remember to refresh the page by hitting F5 on your laptop/desktop, or doing it the other way on a mobile. Thanks Advanced Warning: Under no circumstance what-so-ever should anyone consume this plant for any reason, nor am I encouraging it.
On this blog I will cover: Belladonna's connection to the occult, how it produces scopolamine(a deadly mind control drug, poison, hallucinogen(deliriant), and "medicine" used in hospitals). I'll expose what the occult does with it, how scopolamine is used by criminals to rob, rape, and erase memory, as well as control people, and how nazi's in WWII were guilty of medical euthanasia, which means medical genocide(mass murder), and how they were also into drugs and the occult. I'll also expose whats going on in medical right now. 9/11, 911, Psalm 91:1 All of this is tied in with the serpent on the side of the ambulance, the W.H.O. emblem(idol), and the U.N. emblem(idol). See Exodus 20:3,4-xx; Graven Images; Here is an entire blog on my Angelfire about graven images and the second commandment.
Nicknames: Deadly nightshade;[4] Bella Donna;[4] The name Atropa is derived from the Greek "Atropos", which means "inflexible", the name of a Greek Fate who cuts the thread of life.[4] We can see that the name itself even indicates the poisonous nature of the drug. I'm fascinated by names, and love to learn what they mean, and what words they're derived from, as well as the meanings. Bella, means beautiful, and donna means "woman"(or "lady").[4] The name basically translated to: "deadly beautiful woman". Interestingly, the flowers behind the fruit, create what looks like a five pointed star.
Ethnobotany: Atropa Belladonna, also known as Deadly Nightshade, or simply "Nightshade", is a psychoactive poison, and one of the most poisonous plants on the planet!.[1] It produces a drug called scopolamine, which is a versatile but diabolical substance that is used as a "medicine" in hospitals, as a mind control drug, as a hallucinogen(deliriant[not to be confused with a psychedelic]), or as a deadly poison.[1][2][13] The drug eliminates free will, rendering the drugged victim totally submissive to the drugger, and under their spell(control).[13] It also erases the victims memory of the entire experience, so they know nothing the next morning.[13] This makes it the most diabolical substance that I know of in which the enemy can use for pharmakeia(drug warfare). Witches use it for divination, necromancy, and other occult practices, including drug warfare(to hypnotize and control victims).[8][9][10][11][12] I really enjoy exposing witches. It was also used in witches ointments, that were applied topically to assist them in astral travel.[14] Belladonna was also used as eye drops, to dialate the pupils, as sort of a sexual weapon that would make the witch or woman using it appear more attractive(dialated pupils have an effect on the male brain, as they signal sexual arousal).[15][16] Because of the mind control properties Belladonna and scopolamine induces, it could be used even further as a sexual weapon, so know this possibility exist. If you look on the ingredients label for certain eye drops, you'll see that it is still put into eye drops today(look for belladonna extract). It's used by big pharmaceutical companies, along with other scopolamine producing plants to make eye drops with, and to isolate out the scopolamine to be used in hospitals.[6][15]
Atropa Belladonna fits the description of the fruit of the tree of knowledge perfectly, because if ye eat thereof, you're most likely going to die. Between that, and it being used for everything listed in Deuteronomy 18, and being connected to death, and necromancy, and the knowledge of how to make "medicines" out of poisons(a serpent practice that modern medical is obsessed with), is further evidence that it is indeed the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. I want to emphasize that there's a major difference between deliriants like scopolamine producing plants, and psychedelics, as they are totally the opposite of one another in their effects, as one confuses, diminishes awareness, and the other opens the psyche. In other words, hallucinogens are deliriants, and psychedelics are the opposite.
Classification: Poison; Deliriant[hallucinogen]; Mind control drug; Truth serum; Used in pharmaceutical industry; Occult device[fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil; The plant is a perennial;[4]
Plant Family: Solanaceae;[4] Genus: Atropa;[4] Species: A. bella-donna;[4]
Native Habitat: Atropa Belladonna is indigenous to central and southern Europe, as well as Asia Minor.[4] It has been domesticated into the U.S., England, Germany, and India.[4]
Phytochemicals: scopolamine;[17][18][19] hyoscyamine;[17][18][19] tropane;[17][18][19] atropane;[17][18][19] For anyone who is interested, I've put together an evolving list of plants that produce scopolamine. The leaf produces not less than 0.35% of alkaloids.(note: this may vary)[4]
What is Phytochemistry? What are Phytochemicals? Phytochemicals are NOT research chemicals, are NOT drugs that are laced onto plants... Phytochemicals are complex medicines that are produced BY plants, otherwise known as ethnobotanicals.[4][5][6][7] Phytochemistry is a real branch of science in school where researchers in the field study the pharmacology of ethnobotanicals, which are plants used as drugs or medicines by indigenous cultures all throughout history, and often times in a religious or ceremonial context.[4][5][6][7] This is where all of our knowledge in modern drugs, medicine, and pharmacology as well as chemistry was derived from, ethnobotanicals and ethnobotany.[4][5][6][7]
Pharmacological Properties: Don't be misled by any of the supposed medicinal qualities that you read here, because remember this plant is deadly. Big pharmaceutical companies LOVE to make "medicine" out of poisons.., and scopolamine being used in hospitals across the U.S.A. is just one example.[27][4] Belladonna behaves as a parasympathetic depressant, which is why it is useful as a spasmolytic agent.[4] In modern "medicine"(serpent medical), it is used as an adjunctive therapy in the treatment of ulcers, functional digestive disorders.[4] "It has anticholinergic properties, and it is used to control excess motor activity of the gastrointestinal tract and spasms of the uninary tract.[4] Pharmaceuticals made from Belladonna: Bellafoline, Belladenal, Bellergal, Butibel, and Donnatal;[4]
CIA Research & Drug Warfare(Pharmakeia) Believe it or not, I found academic sources that proves the CIA studied scopolamine and other drugs(including MDMA), to be tested for their drug warfare capabilities.[22][23][24] The CIA found that scopolamine makes a successful truth serum.[22][23][24] The military also tested these drugs for warfare.[25] The CIA also experimented with mescaline, MDMA, and other drugs.[22][23][24][25] I can personally attest that MDMA is a truth serum, as in my own experiences with it in the past, it definately makes people open up, and talk about things they would ordinarily not discuss. It can be awkward the next day when sober, being reminded of all the things that users spill while under the influence. It removes social filters, and creates the illusion of "best friends" with anyone who just happens to be around you while you're under its spell. MDMA is a type of methamphetamine, as the scientific name for the drug is: methylenedioxymethamphetamine.[26]
Antidotes: Jesus Christ; Echinacea purpurea; Goldenseal, Yarrow, Pau'darco; That's my personal list, and here is what some academic sources suggest are antidotes to belladonna and or scopolamine and atropine poisoning: physostigmine or pilocarpine, which are two phytochemicals produced by another toxic plant called the Calabar bean(Physostigma venenosum)[20][21]
O.G. Observations In Regards To Antidotes: From 2011-2024 I ran BotanicalGuides.com, as an affiliate marketer for the biggest O.G's in the Ethnobotanical industry, including Bouncing Bear Botanicals. Something cool that I noticed is that throughout even my time learning about occult cultures like the Wiccans, the Shamans, Pagans, and also the Mystics and Native Americans, is that the darker members of these occult cultures tend to gravitate towards poisons and toxic plants, whereas I naturally gravitate more towards antidotes(medicines). I know a lot about antidotes to poisons, and from hands on experience. During this period, I still smoked fortune-500 tobacco.. I would often feel sick from smoking too many cigarettes, and was testing various ethnobotanicals for their anti-poison(detox) properties, and I've observed serious results with all of the plants I just suggested. I could feel them healing my body and mind, and detoxifying me from the poisons. I would think though, that in order for an antidote to work against actual scopolamine or bella donna poisoning, it must be administered quickly enough, and in large enough dosages. Echinacea should be consumed until one feels better, and then a little more after that to top it off.
One final bit of intel on the occult: I want people to know these facts, because they are hidden in plain sight, and not known by enough of the mainstream. Freemasons are actively recruiting Jews and Christians following the principle of "keep your friends close but your enemies closer". Freemasonry is an occult organization, that at its higharchy, is into illegal drugs(psychedelics,deliriants), alchemy, and all aspects of occultism, including witchcraft.[28][29][30][31] Another rare fact that not enough people are aware of is that Nazism is an occult phenomena(nazi's are occult), and were heavily into drugs as well(including drug warfare, including medical murder(euthanasia)).[32][33][34][35][36][37][38][39][40][41][42][43][44] Finally, the satanic temple are also obviously occult, and have been lurking behind the scenes all these decades slowly hearding society towards their version of how they think things should be, not the original America that was about freedom, equality, and free enterprise. They're all the same people.
Related Ethnobotanicals: Datura(Brugmansia arborea), Scopolia carniolica, Bittersweet Nightshade(Solanum dulcamara), evolving list of scopolamine producing plants
Buy Belladonna Scopolamine





Academic citations:
[1] Kwakye, Gunnar F., et al. "Atropa belladonna neurotoxicity: Implications to neurological disorders." Food and Chemical Toxicology 116 (2018): 346-353.
[2] Baricevic, Dea, et al. "Effect of water stress and nitrogen fertilization on the content of hyoscyamine and scopolamine in the roots of deadly nightshade (Atropa belladonna)." Environmental and Experimental Botany 42.1 (1999): 17-24.
[3] Gottlieb, Otto R. "Phytochemicals: differentiation and function." Phytochemistry 29.6 (1990): 1715-1724.
[7] Faria, Miguel. "“Plants of the Gods” and their hallucinogenic powers in neuropharmacology—A review of two books." Surgical Neurology International 12 (2021): 343.
[8] Michael, Coby. The Poison Path Herbal: Baneful Herbs, Medicinal Nightshades, and Ritual Entheogens. Simon and Schuster, 2021.
[9] GUIDE, PLANT WORKER’S., and R. OTH. "The Witching Herbs 13 Essential Plants and Herbs for Your Magical Garden (PDFDrive)."
[10] Masello, Robert. Raising Hell: a concise history of the black arts and those who dared to practice them. Open Road Media, 2014.
[11] Waniakowa, Jadwiga. "" Mandragora" and" Bellado
[12] Lee, M. R. "Solanaceae IV: Atropa belladonna, deadly nightshade." Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh 37.1 (2007): 77-84.
[13] Vice: Worlds Scariest Drug: Scopolamine
[14] Clifton, Chas S. "Witches Still Fly: Or Do They? Traditional Witches, Wiccans, and Flying Ointment." Magic and Witchery in the Modern West: Celebrating the Twentieth Anniversary of'The Triumph of the Moon' (2019): 223-243.
[15] Müller, Jurgen Leo. "Love potions and the ointment of witches: historical aspects of the nightshade alkaloids." Journal of Toxicology: Clinical Toxicology 36.6 (1998): 617-627.
[16] Lick, David J., Clarissa I. Cortland, and Kerri L. Johnson. "The pupils are the windows to sexuality: Pupil dilation as a visual cue to others’ sexual interest." Evolution and Human Behavior 37.2 (2016): 117-124.
[17] Piatti, Diletta, et al. "Simultaneous quantification of hyoscyamine and scopolamine using HPLC-DAD in four Solanaceae: Hyoscyamus niger, Datura stramonium, Atropa belladonna and Mandragora officinarum." Natural Product Research 39.3 (2025): 438-443.
[18] Shi, Zhiwen, et al. "Tropane alkaloids (hyoscyamine, scopolamine and atropine) from genus Datura: Extractions, contents, syntheses and effects." Industrial Crops and Products 186 (2022): 115283.
[19] Navasi, F., et al. "A Comprehensive overview on valuable tropane alkaloids: scopolamine, atropine, and hyoscyamine." Journal of Medicinal Plants 18.70 (2019): 21-44.
[20] Potter, Samuel O.L. (1893). A Handbook of Materia Medica Pharmacy and Therapeutics. London: P. Blakiston's. pp. 53. "the antidote for belladonna is physostigmine or pilocarpine the same as for atropine."
[21] Hudson, J. Q. A. "Remarks on the Physiological Action and Therapeutic Uses of Physostigma Venonosum, or the Ordeal Bean of Calabar." The Southern Medical Record 3.
[22] Lakstygal, Anton M., et al. "Dark classics in chemical neuroscience: atropine, scopolamine, and other anticholinergic deliriant hallucinogens." ACS chemical neuroscience 10.5 (2018): 2144-2159.
[23] Wheelis, Mark. "The Use and Misuse of LSD by the US Army and the CIA." (2012).
[24] Patocka, Jiri, and Romana Jelinkova. "Atropine and atropine-like substances usable in warfare." Mil. Med. Sci. Lett 86.2 (2017): 58-69.
[25] Passie, Torsten, and Udo Benzenhöfer. "MDA, MDMA, and other “mescaline‐like” substances in the US military's search for a truth drug (1940s to 1960s)." Drug testing and analysis 10.1 (2018): 72-80.
[26] Shulgin, Alexander T. "The background and chemistry of MDMA." Journal of psychoactive drugs 18.4 (1986): 291-304.
[27] Renner, Ulf D., Reinhard Oertel, and Wilhelm Kirch. "Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics in clinical use of scopolamine." Therapeutic drug monitoring 27.5 (2005): 655-665.
[28] Newman, P. D. Alchemically Stoned-The Psychedelic Secret of Freemasonry: The Psychedelic Secret of Freemasonry. Lulu. com, 2017.
[29] Carrico, David. "CHAPTER TWELVE FREEMASONRY AND THE 20TH CENTURY OCCULT REVIVAL."
[30] Bogdan, Henrik. "Freemasonry and Western Esotericism." Handbook of Freemasonry. Brill, 2014. 277-305.
[31] Davies, W. "The Rise of Modern Magic." The Oxford Illustrated History of Witchcraft and Magic (2017): 195-224.
[32] Strube, Julian. "Nazism and the Occult." The Occult World. Routledge, 2014. 336-347.
[33] Roland, Paul. The Nazis and the occult: the dark forces unleashed by the Third Reich. Arcturus Publishing, 2018.
[34] Black, Monica, and Eric Kurlander, eds. Revisiting the" Nazi occult": histories, realities, legacies. Vol. 4. Boydell & Brewer, 2015.
[35] Levenda, Peter. Unholy Alliance: A History of Nazi Involvement with the Occult (New and Expanded Edition). Nicolas-Hays, Inc., 2019.
[36] Ohler, Norman. Blitzed: Drugs in Nazi Germany. Penguin UK, 2016.
[37] Gomes, Tabitha. "Nazi experiments." Hohonu 8 (2010): 13-16.
[38] Schaffner, Anna Katharina. "Sieg high: The role of drugs in the Nazis' rise and fall." TLS. Times Literary Supplement 5923 (2016): 13-14.
[39] Mitscherlich, Alexander, and Fred Mielke. Doctors of infamy: the story of the Nazi medical crimes. Pickle Partners Publishing, 2015.
[40] Grodin, Michael A., Erin L. Miller, and Johnathan I. Kelly. "The Nazi physicians as leaders in eugenics and “euthanasia”: Lessons for today." American journal of public health 108.1 (2018): 53-57.
[41] Friedlander, Henry. The origins of Nazi genocide: From euthanasia to the final solution. Univ of North Carolina Press, 1997.
[42] Gardella, John E. "The cost-effectiveness of killing: An overview of Nazi “euthanasia.”." Medical Sentinel 4.4 (1999): 132-135.
[43]> Burleigh, Michael. "Psychiatry, German Society and the Nazi “euthanasia” Programme." The Holocaust. Routledge, 2002. 53-72.
[44] Amir, Amnon. Euthanasia in Nazi Germany. State University of New York at Albany, 1977.
[4] Tyler, Varro E, et al. Pharmacognosy. 1988.
[5] Balick, Michael J., and Paul Alan Cox. Plants, People, and Culture : The Science of Ethnobotany. New York, Garland Science, 2020.
[6] Swerdlow, Joel L. Nature’s Medicine : Plants That Heal. Washington, D.C., National Geographic Society, 2000.
Encyclopedia Sources:
Other resources:
M.A.P.S. Ethnobotanical Studies By Scholars
PubChem - pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov