PSA it's really easy to grow opium poppies and make opium discretely, just not
| Nubile Insane Market | 04/12/25 | | Federal Stimulating Spot Toaster | 04/12/25 | | Nubile Insane Market | 04/12/25 | | Nubile Insane Market | 04/12/25 |
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Date: April 12th, 2025 10:46 PM Author: Nubile Insane Market
Lots of reasons to do this.
1. Poppies are hardly and grow in a lot of harsh conditions, including places where it's hard to grow food crops.
2. Turnaround time is nothing, especially considering #1. In arid conditions, the most common food crops are going to be the kinds of things that grow on trees or vines, which can take YEARS to produce anything. These opium poppies take a few months to sprout, and you can harvest them right away. Just cop dat juice, till the land and plant a new crop.
3. Demand is always there. Just give people opium until they get hooked and you'll have customers for life.
4. Easy af to make the opium. You can do it in the field under a tarp.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5709720&forum_id=2#48841815) |
Date: April 12th, 2025 10:50 PM Author: Nubile Insane Market
The psychological effects of opium may have been known to the ancient Sumerians (circa 4000 B.C.) whose symbol for the poppy wus hul ("joy") and gil ("plant"). The plant was known in Europe at least 4,000 years ago as evidenced by fossil remains of poppy seed cake and poppy pods found in the Swiss Lake Dwellings of the Neolithic Age. Opium was probably consumed by the ancient Egyptians and was known to the Greeks as well. The poppy is also referred to in Homer's works The Iliad and The Odyssey. In addition, Hippocrates (460-357 B.C.), the father of medicine, recommended drinking the juice of the white poppy mixed with the seed of nettle.
The opium poppy probably reached China about the 7th century A.D. through the efforts of Arab traders who advocated its use for medicinal purposes. In Chinese literature, however, there are earlier references to its use. The noted Chinese surgeon Hua To of the Three Kingdoms (220-264 A.D.) used opium preparations and Cannabis indica for his patients to swallow before undergoing major surgery.
The beginning of widespread opium use in China has been associated by some historians with the introduction of tobacco into that country by the Dutch from Java in the 17th century. The Chinese were reported to mix opium with tobacco. The practice was adopted throughout the area and eventually resulted in increased opium smoking, both with and without tobacco.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5709720&forum_id=2#48841823) |
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