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Buy Mexican Fence Post Cactus

Pachycereus marginatus For Sale




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."
Nicknames: Mexican Fence Post Cactus;[x]
Classification: Ornamental to most, psychedelic / medicine to others.
Legality: 100% legal in the USA as long as you don't isolate out the illegal drugs that the cactus produces. FYI: Freemasons, nazi's, and satanic temple members are into the use of these drugs for occult purposes[4][5][7][8][9], and they understand (as well as scientist), their medicinal value.[see MAPS.org for more facts on the therapeutic use of natural psychedelics/drugs.]
Plant Family:
Ethnobotany: The Mexican Fence Post Cactus, scientific name Pachycereus marginatus, has been utilized by indigenous Mexican medicine men and women in the treatment of various diseases, including cancer![22] I cite academic sources on the science behind the medicinal properties of the Mexican Fence Cactus further down the page as well, in the pharmacology/phytochemistry section.
Natural Habitat:
Synergizes with: Tobacco, Banisteriopsis caapi, Bobinsana, Syrian rue, Passion flower, and other harmala and harmaline producing plants. Harmala and Harmaline are two constituents produced by certain plants that aid in the absorption of other psychoactive substances.[x] They're the constituents in the Ayahuasca brew that allow the DMT to absorb and become active in your bloodstream.[x]
O.G. Observations & Related Thoughts: Socialist ARE the occult, and I cite academic sources at the end of this claim once again to confirm it.[4][5][7][8][9] I've exposed the freemasonry occult connection, nazism and its connection to the occult, as well their ties to drugs and big pharmaceutical operations, as well as ethnobotany.[4][5][7][8][9] They use drugs as weapons.[16][17][18][19][20][21] They specialize in covert poisons that work slowly over time, like Proplyene glycol that they're putting in "hemp" products. They also use fluoride, as the science shows it is linked to lower IQ levels(it makes people dumb and I suspect they're putting it in pharmaceuticals too).[11][12][13][14][15] It's synthetic pharmakeia. Legal "hemp derived" thc vapes rot teeth, and cause brain fog around the one year mark. This is why they legalized these products in 2018. It's warfare against the American people. They're stealing the real Marijuana, and partying with it down at the freemason lodges and satanic temples, and feeding the youth poison to dumb them down. The face mask thing is also a way to dumb them down as lack of oxygen to the brain kills brain cells. Social distancing is there to keep people from working together as they divide. They're all skin colors, and they're in police and medical. 9/11, 911, Psalm 91:1. Fact: A plant by the scientific name of: Tridax procumbens, which is commonly used as a medicinal herb in India, as a biocarbon absorbent for fluoride(an antidote of fluoride).[?] Stop drinking tap water today.
What is Phytochemistry? Ethnobotany? And Phytochemicals? All three of these titles are related to one another. Ethnobotany is where it all starts, and is the study of the cultural use of plants, that is interested in not only the medicinal use of plants by various cultures, but the religious and spiritual use of plants as well, which often times encompasses practices listed in Deuteronomy 18;[2][23][24][25] Ethnobotanicals are plants of cultural and spiritual significance, as they are the source for all drugs and medicines on the planet, including the knowledge required to make synthetic drugs.[2][23][24][25] Phytochemist study the ethnobotanical specimens in the laboratory to determine their complex pharmacology, and isolate out endless numbers of medicinal components for research.[2][23][24][25][26]
Phytochemicals Produced By Pachycereus marginatus: Mescaline[1] Mexican Fence Post Cactus also produces: Pilocereine[1]
Pharmacological / Medicinal Properties Of Pachycereus marginatus: One academic source states: "In one study, conducted on tumor-bearing mice, the extracts from the cacti produced up to 89% in vitro cytotoxicity to L5178Y-R cancer-causing cells, supporting the future evaluation of the extracts as bioactive compounds within clinical-level studies."[22]
More blogs: Exposing Crimes Of The SRCSO, Pensacola FBI & DEA, Mondia whitei, Oneirogens explained(dream herbs!), Cannabis ethnobotany, and ancient spiritual beliefs explained, Exposing Crimes Of The SRCSO Pensacola FBI & DEA, Ipomoea pes caprae, Beach Morning Glory Ethnobotany, Synthetic pharma fortune-500 "kratom" products being pushed on public as pharmakeia on the rise.
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Academic citations:
[1] Brewer, John M. "Pachycereus Marginatus Alkaloids." (1964).
[4] Newman, P. D. Alchemically Stoned-The Psychedelic Secret of Freemasonry: The Psychedelic Secret of Freemasonry. Lulu. com, 2017.
[5] Eliade, Mircea. "Occultism and Freemasonry in Eighteenth-Century Europe." (1973): 89-91.[6] Merkur, Dan. "Drugs and the Occult." The Occult World. Routledge, 2014. 672-680.
[7] Black, Monica, and Eric Kurlander, eds. Revisiting the" Nazi occult": histories, realities, legacies. Vol. 4. Boydell & Brewer, 2015.
[8] Ohler, Norman. Blitzed: Drugs in Nazi Germany. Penguin UK, 2016.
[9] Read, John. From alchemy to chemistry. Courier Corporation, 1995.
[10] Quintanilla-Licea, Ramiro, et al. "Cytotoxic effect of methanol extracts and partitions of two Mexican desert plants against the murine lymphoma L5178Y-R." American Journal of Plant Sciences 7.11 (2016): 1521-1530.
[11] Tang, Qin-qing, et al. "Fluoride and children’s intelligence: a meta-analysis." Biological trace element research 126 (2008): 115-120.
[12] Green, Rivka, et al. "Association between maternal fluoride exposure during pregnancy and IQ scores in offspring in Canada." JAMA pediatrics 173.10 (2019): 940-948.
[13] Kundu, Hansa, et al. "Effect of fluoride in drinking water on children's intelligence in high and low fluoride areas of Delhi." Journal of Indian Association of Public Health Dentistry 13.2 (2015): 116-121.
[14] Wang, Guojian, et al. "A study of the IQ levels of four-to seven-year-old children in high fluoride areas." Fluoride 41.4 (2008): 340-3.
[15] Kumar, Jayanth V., et al. "Association between low fluoride exposure and children's intelligence: a meta-analysis relevant to community water fluoridation." Public Health 219 (2023): 73-84.
[16] Schmaltz, Florian. "Neurosciences and research on chemical weapons of mass destruction in Nazi Germany." Journal of the History of the Neurosciences 15.3 (2006): 186-209.
[17] Gomes, Tabitha. "Nazi experiments." Hohonu 8 (2010): 13-16.
[18] Andreas, Peter. "Drugs and war: What is the relationship?." Annual Review of Political Science 22.1 (2019): 57-73.[19] Paton, Diana. "Witchcraft, poison, law, and Atlantic slavery." The William and Mary Quarterly 69.2 (2012): 235-264.
[20] Fatur, Karsten. "“Hexing herbs” in ethnobotanical perspective: A historical review of the uses of anticholinergic Solanaceae plants in Europe." Economic Botany 74.2 (2020): 140-158.
[21] Lau, K., Swiney, B. S., Reeves, N., Noguchi, K. K., & Farber, N. B. (2012). Propylene glycol produces excessive apoptosis in the developing mouse brain, alone and in combination with phenobarbital. Pediatric research, 71(1), 54-62.
[22] https://arboretum.arizona.edu/photo-walk-around-world-north-american-southwest
[2] Balick, Michael J., and Paul Alan Cox. Plants, People, and Culture: The Science Of Ethnobotany. Garland Science, 2020.
[23] Swerdlow, Joel L. Nature's Medicine : Plants That Heal. Washington, D.C., National Geographic Society, 2000.
[24] Tyler, Varro E, et al. Pharmacognosy. 1988
[25] Schultes, Richard Evans, and Albert Hoffman. Plants Of The Gods: Their Sacred, Healing, And Hallucinogenic Powers. Rochester, Vt., Healing Arts Press, 2001.
[26] Burrell, R. C. "Phytochemistry. What it is and how it has developed." Journal of Chemical Education 14.11 (1937): 520.
Encyclopedia Sources:
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pachycereus_marginatus
Other resources:
M.A.P.S. Ethnobotanical Studies By Scholars
PubChem - pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov