Anonymous ID: f8bd40 Jan. 26, 2021, 3:05 a.m. No.12718343   🗄️.is 🔗kun

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]

  1. Phytoremediation

  2. Food

  3. Medicine

 

QUADRIVIUM WHY: LIVE

 

  1. Clothes *

  2. Shelter

  3. Fuel

  4. 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).

Anonymous ID: f8bd40 Jan. 26, 2021, 9:17 a.m. No.12720799   🗄️.is 🔗kun

dis-epi-genics: disepigenics:DISEPIGENICS

 

the science of decreasing a population by controlled breeding to increase the occurrence of undesirable heritable characteristics.

 

Q: Define anti-LIVe (refer Mark Passio, Vinny Eastwood, Billy TK, et (al) moi)

 

exosomes

https://www.pnas.org/content/113/33/9155

In full analogy with viral biogenesis, some of these vesicles are generated inside cells and on release into the extracellular milieu are called “exosomes,” whereas others pinch off from the plasma membrane and are generally referred to as “microvesicles”

 

Is COVID-19 virus an Exosome?

https://exosome-rna.com/is-covid-19-virus-an-exosome/

 

FYI…under electron microscope, an exosome and “SARS Cov2 virus”look exactly the. same…they are dimensionally and architecturally the same.

They could have been looking at an exosome and called it a virus…in this case SARS Cov2

Reply

 

Thorsten

June 17, 2020 at 2:08 pm

 

So, is it the exosome which causes the corona infection? And, if all the different viruses are probably exosomes, with other words: there is no existing virus at all – what causes all the so-called virus deseases including all of the different sympthomes? Best regards. Thank you for answering!

Reply

ForMyLegionaries

June 25, 2020 at 12:58 am

 

Hello Thorsten. My first time on this site and I’m new to the topics as well. But to my understanding, the “seasonal flu virus” is explained as being the symptoms of a seasonal purge of toxins. Dr Andrew Kaufman has featured in some intriguing videos recently where he posits some questions about germ theory and makes a case for exosomes being behind “viral” symptoms. Of course StasiTube is banning them as fast as they can sniff them out. Which adds to his credibility.

 

Heads are gon'a ROLL:

 

dis | dɪs | (also diss) informal

verb (disses, dissing, dissed) [with object]

speak disrespectfully to or criticize: I don't like her dissing my friends | a campaign of forum postings and emails dissing the company | maybe you should stop dissing psychics and discover that part of yourself.

noun [mass noun]

disrespectful talk.

ORIGIN

1980s: abbreviation of disrespect.

dis- | dɪs |

prefix

1 expressing negation: disadvantage | disbelieve.

2 denoting reversal or absence of an action or state: diseconomy | disaffirm.

3 denoting removal of something: disbud.

• denoting separation: discarnate.

• denoting expulsion: disbar.

4 expressing completeness or intensification of an unpleasant or unattractive action: disgruntled.

ORIGIN

from Latin, sometimes via Old French des-.

 

epi- | ˈɛpi | (also ep-)

prefix

1 upon: epigraph.

2 above: epicontinental.

3 in addition: epiphenomenon.

ORIGIN

from Greek epi ‘upon, near to, in addition’.

 

eugenics | juːˈdʒɛnɪks |

plural noun [treated as singular]

the science of improving a population by controlled breeding to increase the occurrence of desirable heritable characteristics.

DERIVATIVES

eugenic | juːˈdʒɛnɪk | adjective

eugenically adverb

eugenicist | juːˈdʒɛnɪsɪst | noun & adjective

eugenist | ˈjuːdʒɪnɪst | noun & adjective

 

decrease

verb | dɪˈkriːs |

make or become smaller or fewer in size, amount, intensity, or degree: [no object] : the population of the area has decreased radically | [with object] : the aisles were decreased in height.

noun | ˈdiːkriːs |

an instance of becoming smaller or fewer: a decrease in births | [mass noun] : the rate of decrease became greater.

PHRASES

on the decrease

becoming less common or widespread; decreasing: marriage is on the decrease.

DERIVATIVES

decreasingly | dɪˈkriːsɪŋli | adverb

[as submodifier] : voters have proved decreasingly willing to support the party

ORIGIN

late Middle English: from Old French decreis (noun), decreistre (verb), based on Latin decrescere, from de- ‘down’ + crescere ‘grow’.

 

undesirable | ʌndɪˈzʌɪərəb(ə)l |

adjective

not wanted or desirable because harmful, objectionable, or unpleasant: the drug's undesirable side effects.

noun

a person considered to be objectionable in some way: how could she go around with such undesirables?

DERIVATIVES

undesirability | ʌndɪzʌɪərəˈbɪlɪti | noun

undesirableness | ˌʌndɪˈzʌɪərəblnəs | noun

undesirably | ʌndɪˈzʌɪərəbli | adverb

 

eugenics | 美 juˈdʒɛnɪks | | 英 juːˈdʒеniks |

n.

優生學

 

ユージェニックス 4eugenics

優生学。

 

eu·gen·ics | juːdʒénɪks |

名詞

〖単数扱い〗優生学.

 

eugenics | BrE juːˈdʒɛnɪks, AmE juˈdʒɛnɪks |

noun + verbo sing.

eugenetica f

 

eugenics | BrE juːˈdʒɛnɪks, AmE juˈdʒɛnɪks |

noun, no pl.

Eugenik (Fem.) (technical) Erbgesundheitslehre (Fem.)

 

eugenics | BrE juːˈdʒɛnɪks, AmE juˈdʒɛnɪks |

noun

(+ v sg) eugénisme m

 

eugenics | ju:'dʒenɪks |

znw [mv]

eugenetica, rasverbetering, eugenetiek

 

eugenics | AmE juˈdʒɛnɪks, BrE juːˈdʒɛnɪks |

plural noun

  • v sing eugenia f

 

eu·gen·ics | juːʤéniks |

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