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List Of Scopolamine Producing Plants

Scopolamine is a deadly mind control deliriant




Keep in mind, this list will grow as I do more research and learn new things. I'm always discovering new plants that produce certain substances, like scopolamine. It's exciting because I see the ability to start new trends in the market by being able to put these plants out there. I also enjoy helping the good guys stay on top of whats going on out there in the ethnobotanical world. I defend plants I believe people deserve to have, and oppose deadly mind control drugs like scopolamine and warn about the plants that produce it, and I expose the occult's interest in them, and use of them, as well as the big pharmaceutical industry's interest and use of them as well.
Terrence Mckenna's Scopolamaine trip(Via Datura) The link I just shared is a Terrence Mckenna lecture about the time he dosed on the scopolamine producing plant known as Datura. The stuff he describes is on par with what I witnessed my victimized elderly grandmother go through when local medical nazi's in the 850 performed deliberate medical malpractice on her and framed her as a mental patient. The police covered for the place and tried to cover it up and pin a crime they were involved in on me, twice. Here's a news story about a similar event to what happened to my grandma I'm asking all patriots to please download these with a youtube video downloader than you can find on dogpile or duckduckgo. The socialist are known to cover up facts, documentaries, internet websites, etc. Datura on the news
What is Scopolamine? Briefly: It's a mind control drug known as "The Devils Breath".[16] It's used to rob, control, and rape victims in Columbia especially[14][15][16], but in other parts of the world as well. It's 100% legal in the United States and can be isolated from a number of legal plants(the ones discussed on this page, and more). The primary suspects for producing such a drug as scopolamine are going to be students who study or know phytochemistry(or chemistry period), and people interested in ethnobotany and the occult. Here is a link to an incredible Vice News Documentary On Scopolamine, The Devils Breath That url is: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ToQ8PWYnu04&t=13s
Fact: Every one of these deadly deliriant plants is used by witches and the occult for purposes such as those listed in Deuteronomy 18 like divination and necromancy.[3][5][6][7][8][9]. Divination is fortune telling. They're also used by big pharmaceutical companies in the mass production of drugs.[1] These ethnobotanicals are the foundation for all modern pharmaceuticals[1][10][11], and they are also the fruit from the book of Genesis.
Current count: [11]!
Nine plants that produce scopolamine, but only that I know of!
Have another one? Email ScottTheWarrior@Juno.com Subject: Herbspedia
Deadly Nightshade(Atrop Bella Donna)
Mandrake(Mandragora officinarum)
Henbane bell(Scopolia carniolica)
Serpentine wood(Rauvolfia serpentina)
Sorcerer's Tree(Latua pubiflora)
Chilean Holly (Desfontainia spinosa)
Solanum dulcamara(Bittersweet Nightshade)
Now let me briefly give you an ethnobotanical history of each specimen listed above. Please note: Despite what you may learn about these plants being used as medicine by traditional healers, they're still deadly poisons. The use of deadly drugs as medicine is to only be attempted by highly trained and skilled professionals. I warn against these plants and highly advise against any attempt to make use of them in any way.
Again, the name says it all, as Deadly Nightshade is, you guessed it, DEADLY. It pruduces an evil looking deadly fruit with a 5 pointed star figure behind it, once the petals open.. Creepy.. Reminds me of the fruit from the book of Genesis story.. "ye shall surely die!" Bouncing Bear Botanicals used to sell Deadly Nightshade plants and seeds. It was a bodegas shop that sold dried plant material which naturally contained controlled substances from the plants that produced them. IE: Mimosa hostilis produces DMT(an illegal psychedelic produced by plants), so the dried bark contains it, etc. It was an ethnobotanical shop that provided researchers and potentially even criminals with legal plant material that COULD BE UTILIZED, in the illegal manufacturing of controlled substances such as lsa, dmt, lsd, ibogaine, mescaline, ergot, mdma, etc. What people don't realize, and authorities especially, is that the ethnobotanical industry is just this way... The specimens are not illegal, but they are critical for researchers to be able to get their hands on them. They're also used in medical and scientific research, as well as in the production of and discovery of new medicines.[1][10][11] It may appear to be a legal high drug cartel to people who don't understand it, but despite the fact that some of these products can be used illegally, or in an evil way, they are also still used by scholars for medical research, and drug companies, and people have religious rights to a lot of them as well. It's important that ethnobotanical vendors be be allowed to exist and operate so that Americans can have their God given right to have access to what grows from the earth, and international commerce, and so academics can easily get their hands on ethnobotanical specmins for their scientific research.
"Bane" means death. Pay attention to names. This is third plant that I know of that has "bane" in the name, and is deadly in some way, whether to dogs or to humans. Two of the three that I know of produce scopolamine. Henbane is one, and the other one is Scopolia carniolica, or "Henbane Bell". Another plant called Dogbane is lethal to dogs, hints the "bane" in the name. Names are very telling, so pay attention to them. You can immediately know things about a plant by understanding the significance of its name. Anyway.. Numerous academic sources confirm that Henbane was used as both a poison, a narcotic, and a deliriant(hallucinogen) by witches and magicians, and related occult cults, for practices listed in Deuteronomy 18.[26][27] They used it in divination and necromancy.[26][27]
I saw on the History Channel that Adolf Hitler used Mandrake as a magic charm or talisman. This is reason enough right here for you to NOT HAVING ANYTHING TO DO WITH IT. Mandrake was used by dark occult societies, and had idolatry lore associated with it. The teachings associated with charms and talismans, are meant to trick the victim into behaving a certain way metaphysically... The lies associted with magical lore cause you to change internally, in a way that I can't tangibly understand or explain, but yet I still know it exist and takes place, and it is the metaphysical ACT of idolatry. You shift your faith and praise from the creator and onto the snares that the enemy has assigned for them. The idols of the bible were objects that people worshipped, and this is why they live within these objects. This is why they teach you that these objects have "magical powers", so that you will metaphysically pump your faith and worship into them, where they house a demon of divination. Mandrake produces and contains scopolamine and other deadly deliriant hallucinogenic poisons.[25] Do not consume it nor possess it. Exodus 20:3,4-XX
Researchers believe that it is the atropine and scopolamine constituents that were the active chemical component of ethnobotanical witches oinments that contained Datura which were used in medieval times to engage in and enhance the effects of practices listed in Deuteronomy 18, like necromancy, divination, etc.[17] These substances produced by Datura, are hallucinogenic drugs and poisons. I want to take the time here to educate, and emphasize the difference between a hallucinogen, and a psychedelic. A hallucinogen and a deliriant, are the same thing, psychoactive poisons that deminish awareness and control, and open one up to influence. A psychedelic and a hallucinogen, are the two total opposites. A psychedelic is something that manifest the psyche, or expands its awareness. It's my belief that manna from the bible may have been psilocybin mushrooms, and I believe for sure that it is scopolamine containing plants, and other poisons used by pagan indigenous cultures in association with practices listed in Deuteronomy 18, that is the fruit of the tree of knowledge, from the story in the book of Genesis. The Terrence Mckenna, a famous ethnobotanist researcher, subscribes to the fruit theory as well.[19]
Datura is also of interest to big pharmaceutical companies, as they use it to isolate scopolamine, which they use for motion sickness, and other things, and to make other drugs with.[18] In clinical settings, scopolamine is often mixed with morphine, and used as a sedative, especially during labour, as well as a remedy for stomach pain and cramps.[18] Remember though, that scopolamine is also a mind control drug in non-medical doses, and in even higher doses a poison, as revealed in this excellent investigative journalism piece by Vice News. One thing that people do not know about that I want them to know about, is that ethnobotany, the ethnobotanical industry, and the big pharmaceutical companies as well as the occult, are all connected.[1][2][3] There would be no big pharmaceutical industry if it weren't for plants like Datura, and many other ethnobotanicals, as it is ethnobotanist and the ethnobotanical industry that either supplies big pharma with knowledge and specimens, or directly competes with its markets and operations.[10] It's the peoples economy, vs the socialist and their desire to control all drugs and medicine on earth. The ethnobotanical industry is truly like the wild wild west, because it is a legal market that also leaks into illegal markets.
I love names, so let's start there. Henbane bell can be broken down easily. According to wiktionary, the word Hen means "to sing". "Hen" etymology: Middle English from Old English henn ("hen"), from Proto-Germanic *hanjō ("hen"), from Proto-Indo-European *kan-, *kana- ("to sing")."[?] Bane means death, according to Merriam-Websters dictionary. So it means "to sing death". You get the idea, not a pretty picture. The scientific name for this plant, Scopolia carniolica is also indicative of its nature. Immediately when I saw the scientific name of this plant, I knew it contained scopolamine. Scientist are very specific about how they name things, and the names are very telling, so pay attention. Henbane bell is another scopolamine producing deliriant, and it should never be consumed under any circumstance what-so-ever.
This video says it all. This is an excellent report exposing how drug companies process large quantities of dried plant material. Plant alchemy is basically an occult version of modern chemistry, and it is where drug companies got their base level knowledge from. It's a fact that modern drug manufacturers get their knowledge and sourced chemicals for drug production from ethnobotanicals, and it is the ethnobotanist job to find out which cultures used which plant for which purpose, so that this knowledge can be brought into the lab for the future discovery and production of new medicines.[1][10][11] All modern pharmaceuticals are derived from the knowledge obtained from the study of plants that were utilized by indigenous pagan cultures in practices forbidden in Deuteronomy 18. Alchemy is something that occultist use to make drugs with, and it is in association with freemasonry[20][21], and witchcraft.[20][21] Alchemy is basically occult pharmaceutical manufacturing, and it is modern science that was birthed from the occult.[22]
Video url: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RK-QtG3hoO8
The name says it all.. Sorcerer's Tree is used in magic in Southern Chile, where it is from.[24] It's said that sorcerer's could make someone go insane with the plant.[24] Lots of satanic superstitions are associated with it. Never make the mistake of believing in these lies, as they cause one to commit metaphysical acts which are dangerous to your spiritual well being. Google: Psalm 91:1 NASB by Zondervan. 1995 It's a brown leather-back bible, with gold trim on the edges of the pages, very thin book.
Please keep in mind how serpent medical(the pharmaceutical industry) thrives on poisonous and deadly plants that were and still are utilized by the occult. This is a rarely mentioned scopolamine producing specimen that I am wanting to bring to the righteous authorities attention. I'm not against all ethnobotanicals, and work as an activist in terms of pro Cannabis and pro Kratom and other ethnobotanicals, but I oppose deliriants and the mis-marketing of them. I at least want rigtheous police, DEA, FBI, to know about these things, so they're not in the dark.. because I can assure you, out there somewhere, in the United States, there are people in possession of scopolamine, and I'm sure they've used it on numerous victims.
Serpentine wood used to be sold by Bouncing Bear Botanicals, the guy who started the K2 revolution. The plant produces a deadly poison known as scopolamine[12](a mind control drug), as well as other phytochemicals that have been gone on in the mass production of modern pharmaceutical medicine.[11] Notice that "serpent" is in the name. It also produces chemicals called reserpine, serpentine, and serpine.[13] Notice all three of those have "serp" or "serpent" in the name. I'm noticing a theme here. It's also a pattern that all scopolamine producing plants are all used by witches and the occult. They're guarded by both secret societies, including the freemasons, as well as policed by big pharmaceutical interest.
Chilean holly is yet another rarely heard of or discussed scopolamine producing ethnobotanical ladies and gentlemen. You don't want no part of this one, trust me. This diabolical specimen does not induce a good time, but rather renders the victim powerless to their own will, and instead under the spell of the sorcerer(the poisoner), behind your enchantment. It's mind-boggling to me that the U.S. government wanted to go after something as beneficial and miraculous as Kratom(Mitragyna speciosa), but they don't care about plants that produce deadly mind control drugs, that are known to be used in places like Columbia to rob, rape, and murder victims? I'm glad to put this information out there and make sure the right people know about it. Scopolamine can be a fine white powder. It's said in the Vice documentary by a real sorcerer, that if you can smell it, you're under its influence.
Other HerbsPedia Blogs:
I don't get paid for this reference. This information is here ( the link is to show you that this product is sold legally over the counter )
Buy Scopolamine Here!





Academic citations:
[3] Ostling, Michael. "Babyfat and belladonna: witches' ointment and the contestation of reality." Magic, Ritual, and Witchcraft 11.1 (2016): 30-72.
[5] Llanes, Luana Canzian, et al. "Witches, potions, and metabolites: an overview from a medicinal perspective." RSC medicinal chemistry 13.4 (2022): 405-412.
[6] Schultes, Richard Evans. "From witch doctor to modern medicine: searching the American tropics for potentially new medicinal plants." Arnoldia 32.5 (1972): 198-219.
[7] Michael, Coby. The Poison Path Herbal: Baneful Herbs, Medicinal Nightshades, and Ritual Entheogens. Simon and Schuster, 2021.
[8] Yamada, Yasuyuki, and Mamoru Tabata. "Plant biotechnology of tropane alkaloids." Plant biotechnology 14.1 (1997): 1-10.
[9] Gazel, Mona, et al. "Update on phytoplasma diseases associated with medicinal plants and spices in Asian Countries." Phytoplasma Diseases of Major Crops, Trees, and Weeds. Academic Press, 2023. 233-263.
[12] Skalicka-Woźniak, Krystyna, and Jürg Gertsch. "Antipsychotic natural products." Annual reports in medicinal chemistry. Vol. 55. Academic Press, 2020. 481-515.
[13] Malviya, A., & Sason, R. (2016). The phytochemical and pharmacological properties of Sarpagandha: Rauwolfia Serpentina. Ayushdhara, 3(1), 473-478.
[14] House, Robert E. "The use of scopolamine in criminology." Am. J. Police Sci. 2 (1931): 328.
[15] Balmus, Ioana-Miruna, and Alin Ciobica. "Main plant extracts’ active properties effective on scopolamine-induced memory loss." American Journal of Alzheimer's Disease & Other Dementias® 32.7 (2017): 418-428.
[17] 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.
[18] Nobaza, Kwindla Handy. Extraction of Atropine and Scopolamine from Datura Ferox and Datura Stramonium. L and Sample Clean-Up Using Molecularly Imprinted Polymers. University of Johannesburg (South Africa), 2013.
[19] Clarke, David B., and Marcus A. Doel. "Mushrooms in post-traditional culture: apropos of a book by Terence McKenna." Journal for Cultural Research 15.4 (2011): 389-408.
[20] Newman, P. D. Alchemically Stoned-The Psychedelic Secret of Freemasonry: The Psychedelic Secret of Freemasonry. Lulu. com, 2017.
[21] Merkur, Dan. "Drugs and the Occult." The Occult World. Routledge, 2014. 672-680.
[22] De Givry, Grillot. Witchcraft, magic & alchemy. Courier Corporation, 1971.
[23] Scholtz, S., et al. "Poisons, drugs and medicine: on the use of atropine and scopolamine in medicine and ophthalmology: an historical review of their applications." J. Eye Stud. Treat 1 (2019): 51-58.
[24] Plowman, Timothy, Lars Olof Gyllenhaal, and Jan Erik Lindgren. "Latua pubiflora magic plant from Southern Chile." Botanical Museum Leaflets, Harvard University 23.2 (1971): 61-92.
[25]Scholtz, S., et al. "Poisons, drugs and medicine: on the use of atropine and scopolamine in medicine and ophthalmology: an historical review of their applications." J. Eye Stud. Treat 1 (2019): 51-58.
[26]Lee, M. R. "Solanaceae III: henbane, hags and Hawley Harvey Crippen." The Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh 36.4 (2006): 366-373.
[27]Llanes, Luana Canzian, et al. "Witches, potions, and metabolites: an overview from a medicinal perspective." RSC medicinal chemistry 13.4 (2022): 405-412.
Documentary:
[16] Vice Documentary: Worlds Scariest Drug. Scopolamine https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ToQ8PWYnu04
[1] Tyler, Varro E, et al. Pharmacognosy. 1988.
[10] Balick, Michael J., and Paul Alan Cox. Plants, People, and Culture : The Science of Ethnobotany. New York, Garland Science, 2020.
[11] Swerdlow, Joel L. Nature’s Medicine : Plants That Heal. Washington, D.C., National Geographic Society, 2000.
Encyclopedia Sources:
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scopolamine
Other resources:
M.A.P.S. Ethnobotanical Studies By Scholars
PubChem - pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov