Anonymous ID: 2a9db2 April 15, 2023, 7:23 a.m. No.18699089   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18698770

>>18699083

>Don't get why she has 2 swearing in ceremonies but I didn't take note of Dark to light as she wears black for 1 and white for the other

<<Katie Hobbs swearing in to confirm these people are purposely not being properly sworn in. They can't be charged with Treason if they never took the oath.

 

Start this at 5 minute mark and listen carefully. Katie says stop it before she swears allegiance to the constitution. That is what the official transcript must reflect or it was falsified.

Anonymous ID: 2a9db2 April 15, 2023, 7:58 a.m. No.18699223   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9227 >>9233 >>9234

>>18699195

>>18699207

 

Root Beer” was originally called “root tea” by its inventor Charles Hires. A friend, however, suggested he would do better if he called it “root beer.” Hires, a pharmacist, was on his honeymoon when he came up with the formula for root beer..

>>18698900

>>18698916

A pharmacist created the good root eer, then FDA banned sassafras.

Fuckers.

The good rootbeer was made from God given tree.Then fda "scientists" ruined it for everyone. Health benefits from simple tree, "ban it"

I hate the fda..

Anonymous ID: 2a9db2 April 15, 2023, 8 a.m. No.18699227   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9233

>>18699223

 

Sassafras has no natural enemies and its oil has been used as an antiseptic, a pain killer, and externally to treat lice and insect bites. It was once used in soaps, perfumery and toothpaste. The twigs were used as toothbrushes. Before WWI, research reportedly showed people who drank sassafras tea had fewer throat infections and colds. The wood is heavy, strong and aromatic and was used in boat and bed building. The bark can yield an orange dye.

https://www.eattheweeds.com/sassafras-root-beer-rat-killer/

Anonymous ID: 2a9db2 April 15, 2023, 8:02 a.m. No.18699233   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9238 >>9244 >>9259 >>9469

>>18699223

>>18699227

 

The sassafras is nearly unique among trees by having different shaped leaves on the same tree: Right-hand “mittens,” left-hand “mittens” and double-thumb “mittens.’ On rare occasion, there will be a full glove leaf with five lobes. The leaves have no teeth. The only other “edible” tree that can claim different shaped leaves on the same tree is the Mulberry, but those leaves have teeth. In fact, my red mulberry has only oval leaves and no “mittens” at all. However Paper Mulberry trees do have very large, sand papery mitten leaves with teeth. Paper Mulberry leaves, however, are two to three times larger than sassafras leaves.

 

Spicebush Butterfly

 

Besides having an attractive scent for human bird watchers, the sassafras’ deep blue berries are eaten by some 28 birds including bluebirds, robins, red-eyed vireos, pileated woodpeckers, bobwhites and turkeys. Bears like them too. Beavers like the bark ( and apparently are made of sterner stuff than cancer-catching lab rats.) Sassafras was one of the first exports from the new world to Europe.

Anonymous ID: 2a9db2 April 15, 2023, 8:03 a.m. No.18699238   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9243

>>18699233

 

>The sassafras is nearly unique among trees by having different shaped leaves on the same tree: Right-hand “mittens,” left-hand “mittens” and double-thumb “mittens.’ On rare occasion, there will be a full glove leaf with five lobes

Anonymous ID: 2a9db2 April 15, 2023, 8:11 a.m. No.18699259   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9269 >>9272 >>9430 >>9469 >>9497

>>18699233

There is some fuckery more than we know regarding banning sassafras?

 

Sassafras was one of the first exports from the new world to Europe. As early as 1584 entrepreneurs were sailing to the Americas exploring and looking for sassafras. In 1603 two ships left England for North America for the singular purpose to take home sassafras. By 1610 sassafras was so prized that providing sassafras oil was one of the conditions of the Virginia Charter.

https://www.eattheweeds.com/sassafras-root-beer-rat-killer/

 

The state, national and world champion Sassafras tree — so named in 1951 — is in Owensboro, Kentucky. It is some 23 feet around and 78 feet high. Only 300 years old, it survived centuries of harvesting only to be threatened with a road widening in 1957. Then owner of the tree, Grace Rash, would have none of that. Her late husband, Dr. O.W. Rash, nominated the tree for the national register. She met the bulldozers with a shotgun and held everyone at gunpoint until a call to the governor, A.B. “Happy” Chandler, produced a pardon for the tree. The road was widened and the tree stayed, thanks to Grace, and Happy. Nowadays a governor would first take an opinion poll before acting, Grace would be locked up and on psychotropic drugs, and the tree dumped in a land fill replaced by a spindly designer picked Chinese elm sapling.

Anonymous ID: 2a9db2 April 15, 2023, 8:14 a.m. No.18699269   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9279 >>9430 >>9469 >>9497

>>18699259

Hmmmmm.

 

Native American Indians sassafras the local drug store. Sassafras tea served as a pain reliever, stimulant, and diuretic. Safrole used to be called, by some, Shikimic oil. Interesting. Shikimic acid is the active ingredient in the influenza preparation Tamiflu

Anonymous ID: 2a9db2 April 15, 2023, 8:16 a.m. No.18699279   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9284 >>9430 >>9497

>>18699269

 

Hmmmmmmm.

 

The name Sassafras (SASS-uh-frass) has been around for over 400 years, and there are several notions of where it came from. The leading contender is that it is a corruption of “saxifrage” which is Spanish from Dead Latin for “stone breaker” a reference to using sassafras for the treatment of kidney stones. It is diuretic. Albidum (AL-bih-dum) is also from Dead Latin and means white, referring to the tree’s white roots. Perhaps out of political correctness, many sites say Sassafras and Albidum are American Indian words but there is little evidence to support that. Incidentally “Root Beer” was originally called “root tea” by its inventor Charles Hires

Anonymous ID: 2a9db2 April 15, 2023, 8:18 a.m. No.18699284   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9296 >>9430 >>9469 >>9497

>>18699279

Hmmmmmm.

 

safrole is the base ingredient in MDMA or ecstasy, a club drug. I wonder if this has a connection in the “cancer” scare of safrole in root beer. Making safrole an illegal substance adds to the difficulties of manufacturing and prosecuting of ecstasy use

Anonymous ID: 2a9db2 April 15, 2023, 8:21 a.m. No.18699296   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9304 >>9305 >>9430 >>9469 >>9497

>>18699284

 

James Threadgill

February 27, 2015, 2:04 pm

The George A. Ricaurte ecstasy studies funded by the DEA which purported brain damage from ecstasy have been debunked. Ricuarte claims the l;ab sent him the wrong drug, but the mfg. debunks that claim by way of their automated packaging processing. The 30 vials sent to Ricaurte were part of a batch of 500 all of which were filled with the same material and none the others were found to have the wrong drug. So it is not possible his vials were mislabeled. Ricuarte actually dosed with a form of methamphetamine already none to cause the damage he documented. When no could replicate his results, the truth came out.

 

The moral of the story is don’t believe any study results funded by the DEA. The pressure to produce the desired results leads research to skew results in order to continue receiving funding.

 

Another DEA funded scientist Donald Tashkin was funded by the DEA to prove cannabis causes cancer. After many over a 10+ year period Tashkin ultimately found cannabis actually prevents cancer especially in subjects who smoke tobacco and cannabis. Guess who the DEA is POed out and will never fund again!

 

To date every replicated study of ecstasy has found it’s one the safest recreational drugs used with fewer than 1 adverse event per 100,000 doses and no more than one death per million. Most the deaths attributed to ecstasy have other been from other more dangerous drugs passed off as ecstasy or other major contributing factors. One young woman died from hyper-hydration–drinking too much water killed her. And near 100% of ecstasy deaths are artifacts of the War On Drugs, not the MDMA used.

 

Moral of the story: The War Drugs Kills!

 

REPLY

 

https://www.eattheweeds.com/sassafras-root-beer-rat-killer/