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arbha
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We sell made-to-order LSD microdose vials. The crystal is DS 3.0 some of the purest ever made. It is >99% and dissolved in ethanol or distilled water. We have vended vials on the Darknet since 2019. PGP verification is possible if you have our key or would like to check Recon. Bitcoin and Monero accepted. Ask us about escrow services. Simplex https://z2lxj63dxzbbcm4vlyqglj4eiv7ahn63uryz762abpp6ttirrkvtfrad.onion/a#4N6dYoXZBiPooD2Z2PbI04uyBr7abL7am3KDv3nO9QQ?c=J-L90V_Arv6hE6BgDtQkAsA8DvUE1zAckG7Fy7FEvzo Keychat 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

I think its "robust" if it works reliably.

Our experience is that MPP still do not work regularly, so a fat single channel is best.

LN is not a decentralized network, it is hub-and-spoke.

We suggest microdosing a 10 or 20ug and popping on Kalimera show by

@inpc

Dope beats đŸ”„

https://pirate.mxtthxw.art/@thekalimerashow

Replying to Avatar asyncmind

https://files.sovbit.host/media/16d114303d8203115918ca34a220e925c022c09168175a5ace5e9f3b61640947/2fd54cec800511a9bcffe668b8d907357ff5e2d9b37fa1d0f90162abce9aa725.webp

☕ From Coffee Hustlers to Cannabis Outlaws: A Neo-Victorian Prohibition Tale

Every prohibition writes its own underground playbook. Long before cannabis was demonized, taxed, and restricted, another innocuous plant once drove governments mad with regulation: coffee.

🏮 The Coffee Prohibitions of the 18th–19th Centuries

Coffee wasn’t always the cozy morning ritual we know today. In the 17th–19th centuries, various empires — from the Ottoman Caliphate to Prussia and Sweden — feared its power to ignite public discourse. Coffeehouses were “hotbeds of sedition,” so rulers tried to ban the bean.

But the drink was too good, too social, too necessary.

In response, coffee drinkers became some of the earliest “everyday smugglers”:

Hustling beans: Black-market merchants trafficked green coffee beans through border towns and ports like contraband spice.

Stretching the brew: When supply tightened, people roasted chicory root, acorns, or barley to cut their coffee and make it last longer — not unlike modern “dilution hacks” in cannabis culture.

Speakeasy cafĂ©s: In cities like Stockholm and London, underground “coffee clubs” sprang up, disguised as pastry shops or trade guild meeting rooms.

Portable prep: People ground and brewed in secret, storing the concentrate in flasks to avoid public brewing — the 19th century’s version of discreet vape pens.

Prohibition didn’t stop coffee. It just forced it into shadows where it thrived.

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🌿 Cannabis and the New Victorian Morality

Fast-forward to today. Cannabis, like coffee once was, is shackled by a tangle of moralistic laws, medical gatekeeping, and uneven decriminalization. Its users are:

Navigating legal patchworks that criminalize possession one postcode away.

Learning to stretch supply with microdosing, edibles, or shared social rituals.

Gathering in digital speakeasies — encrypted chats, private clubs, community networks.

Building underground economies around cultivation, quality, and trust.

The parallels are uncanny. It’s a neo-Victorian age of moral panic, with modern technology simply giving the hustle new tools.

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🧭 Lessons From the Coffee Underground

Coffee prohibition didn’t end because rulers suddenly embraced liberty. It ended because:

The market overwhelmed control.

Public sentiment normalized consumption.

Authorities realized enforcement cost more than it solved.

The same arc is unfolding with cannabis. Regulation is tightening even as acceptance grows. But history is clear: when culture loves a substance, prohibition is only ever a detour, never a destination.

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đŸȘ™ In Closing

The bean became a global breakfast table staple. The leaf is on the same trajectory. And if you look closely, today’s cannabis culture is living the same story coffee drinkers wrote centuries ago — chicory root and acorn hacks included.

☕🌿 Prohibition doesn’t kill demand. It teaches people to innovate around it.

#CoffeeProhibition #CannabisProhibition #NeoVictorian #HistoryRepeats #HustlersAndOutlaws #ProhibitionEra #CulturalResistance #InnovationUnderPressure #CoffeeCulture #CannabisCulture #FreedomToChoose #Speakeasy #UndergroundEconomy #ProhibitionParallels #SocialChange

In the modern day there is the same activity but it is now centered around #psilocybin and #LSD now that cannabis is regulated.

Acid microdoses are a good thing actually.

Replying to Avatar jonnyhodl

The Alchemy of Value ft. nostr:npub1cqm6dztalp4l6n04f9k20c333xftgangjla337736dr6faz9na0qf2hjec [SFP069] is now up on YouTube.

A really great conversation which spanned religion, consciousness, psychedelics, self‑responsibility and more.

Please go give it some love đŸ«¶

https://youtu.be/7QGCpnxV0YQ

We can relate.

LSD is good for you.

Replying to Avatar whit

Cool reference

For others: Erwin Schrödinger (1887 – 1961) was an Austrian physicist best known for founding quantum wave mechanics — a cornerstone of modern physics. His ideas reshaped how we understand energy, matter, and the strange probabilistic world of subatomic particles.

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⚛ Core Contributions

1. The Schrödinger Equation (1925–26)

This is his most famous achievement. It describes how the quantum state of a particle evolves over time — in other words, it tells you how the wave-function (ψ) changes.

i\hbar \frac{\partial \psi}{\partial t} = \hat{H}\psi

It’s the quantum counterpart of Newton’s laws, and every electron in an atom obeys it.

2. Wave-Particle Duality

Schrödinger’s work showed that particles, like electrons, could be modeled as waves — not just tiny solid points. This led to the concept of wavefunctions and probability clouds around atomic nuclei.

3. Schrödinger’s Cat (1935)

His famous thought experiment illustrates the weirdness of quantum superposition:

‱ A cat is sealed in a box with a vial of poison triggered by a quantum event (like radioactive decay).

‱ Until someone opens the box, the cat is both alive and dead — a superposition of states.

It was meant as a critique of how absurd quantum interpretation can sound when applied to the macroscopic world.

âž»

🧠 Philosophy & Later Work

Schrödinger was deeply philosophical — he wrestled with the nature of consciousness and reality.

He wrote What Is Life? (1944), where he speculated on how quantum physics might explain biological order — this book inspired Watson & Crick in their search for DNA’s structure.

âž»

đŸŸ In Summary

‱ Born: Vienna, 1887

‱ Died: 1961, Vienna

‱ Major Work: Quantum wave mechanics

‱ Legacy: Bridged physics, philosophy, and biology; the “cat paradox” remains one of the most famous metaphors in science.

nostr:nevent1qqs93rswerlhvkk2kq490qjec03dr3qvckst0zchnfjdmfwu5q5uz7g688qzr

There are substances that make this effect perceivable on a macro scale.

#LSD

#psychedelics

⚡The Definitive Bitcoin Acquisition Tier List (From Sovereign Stackers to Fiat Clowns)

A+ — Earn it.

Sell goods or services for #bitcoin. Pure, sovereign, uncut sats straight from people who actually value your time.

A — P2P Cash Trades.

Handshakes over handshakes. Just pray your new “freedom-loving friend” isn’t wearing a wire.

A- — nostr:npub1gdfr0r0an32jalqryqlvpn3gsef2hu832wv6kp5p2gt2aqa2n8yqd42ffw / nostr:npub1sqn6rpml88nq8khuvvneuqztfmvalpsarr8grkwy837hzdw63ajs6t5net

Anonymous trades online. Like Tinder for Bitcoin - except when it works, it actually feels good.

B+ — Mining at Home.

Turn electricity into freedom. Sounds like a jet engine, feels like victory.

B — Getting Paid in BTC.

Your boss thinks it’s edgy. You know it’s monetary evolution.

B- — No-KYC Exchanges (HodlHodl, etc.)

Solid privacy play. Just don’t cry if the site disappears mid-trade.

C+ — Buying from Friends/Family.

Trust-based, but holidays get weird when you’re the only one who sold the top.

C — Bitcoin ATMs.

Like a vending machine that hates you. 15% fee for the privilege of convenience.

C- — Gift Cards → BTC.

Feels like laundering your own allowance. 10/10 for creativity though.

D+ — “No-KYC” CEXs.

If it sounds too good to be true, it’s probably run by a guy named Vlad.

D — Mining Pools.

You’re “helping the network” but mostly just donating hash to a corporation with better lawyers.

D- — Bitcoin ETFs.

You don’t own Bitcoin. You own a picture of someone else’s Bitcoin.

F+ — Gambling Sites.

Win big or lose everything. Either way, you’ll have a story (and no sats).

F — Begging for Sats.

“Plz zap me.” Bold strategy, Cotton.

F- — Coinbase / Binance.

Hand over your ID, privacy, and dignity. You now officially own government-approved Bitcoin. Congrats, stacker.

Checks out.