https://8kun.top/qresearch/res/12716040.html#12718254
▶Anonymous (You) 01/26/21 (Tue) 11:46:49e4b951 (1) No.12718254
>> The Fastest Way To Solve Climate Change Problem Is Making Plant Trees Become A Competitive Sport Messiah Buddha
T.R.E.E.s AND cannabis.
Taking Responsibility for Earth's Environment: TREE(s)
Cannabis geopolymers sequesters CO2; more efficiently than TREEs: Imagine THAT!
Q: WHAT is cannabis? (Trivium 1,2,3)
Q: WHY cannabis? (Quadrivium 4,5,6,7)
PLANT TREES AND CANNABIS Fruit trees are my preference: But ALL trees make life possible…
Then cannabis for Ortegrity entourage effect
TRIVIUM (What before WHY) [1:Order-critical; 2 and 3 binary (polarity) interchangeable]
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Phytoremediation
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Food
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Medicine
QUADRIVIUM WHY: LIVE
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Clothes *
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Shelter
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Fuel
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Transport
Think about that like your next heart beat, breath, drink and meal: 3 seconds, 3 minutes, 3 days, 3 weeks <:
[Miss ONE of those 3's and YOU ARE DEAD]<:>[LOGIC]
*4. Clothes are optional: "Just leave the children and animals alone." ~Jay Parker SRA SURVIVOR and Thrive'a
sequester | sɪˈkwɛstə |
verb [with object]
1 isolate or hide away: she is sequestered in deepest Dorset | the artist sequestered himself in his studio for two years.
2 another term for sequestrate: their property was sequestered by Parliament.
3 Chemistry form a chelate or other stable compound with (an ion, atom, or molecule) so that it is no longer available for reactions: non-precipitating water softeners use complex phosphates to sequester calcium and magnesium ions | (as adjective sequestering) : the organic sequestering agent EDTA.
noun US
a general cut in government spending: if the budget deal hadn't gone through, there would have been a sequester of at least $100 billion.
ORIGIN
late Middle English: from Old French sequestrer or late Latin sequestrare ‘commit for safekeeping’, from Latin sequester ‘trustee’.
sequestrate | ˈsiːkwəstreɪt, ˈsiːkwɛstreɪt |
verb [with object]
take legal possession of (assets) until a debt has been paid or other claims have been met: the power of courts to sequestrate the assets of unions.
• take forcible possession of (something); confiscate: in November 1956 the property was sequestrated by the authorities.
• legally place (the property of a bankrupt) in the hands of a trustee for division among the creditors: (as adjective sequestrated) : a trustee in a sequestrated estate.
• declare (someone) bankrupt: two more poll tax rebels were sequestrated.
DERIVATIVES
sequestrable | sɪˈkwɛstrəb(ə)l | adjective
sequestrator | ˈsiːkwəstreɪtə, ˈsiːkwɛstreɪtə | noun
ORIGIN
late Middle English (in the sense ‘separate from general access’): from late Latin sequestrat- ‘given up for safekeeping’, from the verb sequestrare (see sequester).