The_7_Club

The_7_Club

Newbie
Message
Follow
4
#204624
Global pos.
3
Answer
4
Followers

Activity Show all

20d ago
The_7_Club
1mo ago
The_7_Club
Login

13 comments
Sort by
popularity
popularity
newest
oldest
Condocannibus
Condocannibus commented2mo ago
This is what I do with the weed i dont smoke. But this routine makes very powerful pain relief. With the right product this would be even better. Last of my stock usually no shake but had no choice I'm about a week or so out of a small harvest
Comment by Condocannibus photo #1Comment by Condocannibus photo #2Comment by Condocannibus photo #3Comment by Condocannibus photo #4
The_7_Club
The_7_Club commented1mo ago
@Condocannibus, Tincture is very useful and wise. You can also extract the medicine in oil or fat. Hempseed oil, olive oil, butter, high fat cream. I do the cream and have a nice creamy coffee or tea. If you need true medical genetics I can make a recommendation. You can write them and they will take care of you.
The_7_Club
The_7_Club commented2mo ago
How to quietly capture an entire population’s access to a substance that has been used for thousands of years as medicine, ritual, and mind-tool. It is not conspiracy. It is pattern recognition. The same psychological and economic levers that turned farmers into permanent customers with corn are now being dropped on cannabis seeds, right on schedule, effective November 12, 2026. Here is the detailed correlation list. Read it like an operator’s manual on control. 1. The Corn Playbook, Step by Step Repeat In the 1930s companies like Pioneer (now Corteva) pushed hybrid corn. Farmers loved the first-generation (F1) vigor: bigger yields, uniform plants. But when they saved and replanted those seeds, the F2 generation fell apart: weak, uneven, low-yielding. Within two generations almost nobody saved seed anymore. They had to buy new hybrid bags every single spring.Then came Monsanto’s GM patents in the 90s. Now 92 to 94 percent of U.S. corn is patented, herbicide-tolerant, insect-resistant, or both. Saving seed equals federal lawsuit. Farmers became tenants on their own land, paying rent (seed plus chemicals) to one corporation every year. Biodiversity collapsed. Ancestral open-pollinated varieties almost vanished.Exact same playbook incoming for cannabis. 2. Polyhybrid Seeds Equal the New Valuable Trap Most People Are Holding Modern cannabis varieties you buy online or in dispensaries are almost always complex polyhybrids: multiple unrelated lines crossed and crossed again (often involving five or more parent genetics in the pedigree). Seed companies market the first generation of these crosses as F1 seeds. But this is straight-up marketing deception.In real plant breeding a true F1 hybrid is the progeny of two genetically stable inbred parent lines (IBLs). Most cannabis “F1” seeds are not that. The parents themselves are already hybrids or polyhybrids, so you do not get the uniformity or hybrid vigor that the label promises. The next generation (F2) segregates wildly: different ratios of THC, CBD, terpenes, hermaphrodites, weak plants. So you keep buying new seeds every run. A 2022 PLoS ONE study of 89,923 commercial samples proves exactly this amalgamation: 96.5 percent of everything on the market is THC-dominant with only three consistent terpene clusters nationwide, and strain names or labels tell you nothing about the actual chemistry. Decades of nonstop hybridization have turned the entire U.S. supply into one homogenized genetic soup. Psychological hook: The ego boost of owning rare or limited drops makes people defend them like treasure. That is the dependency mechanism. Exactly like hybrid corn. 3. Stabilized IBLs Equal the Real Threat to Control Inbred Lines (IBLs) are the opposite: stabilized over many generations of repeated inbreeding so they breed true. Same plant, same potency, same medicine every single time. You can save seed, select, and pass it down for centuries.These are the lines that survived the massive hybridization waves from the global seed trade and the Hippy Trail era. True untouched landraces basically no longer exist because of all the unintentional and intentional crosses that started back then. Big Ag cannot patent or control something you can grow forever from one pack. So they have to make those seeds disappear. 4. The November 2026 Hammer, Federal Re-Definition of Hemp (H.R. 5371 / FY2026 Appropriations) Effective November 12, 2026 the legal definition of hemp changed from the 2018 Farm Bill.Key kill-shot:Hemp is now defined by total THC (including THCA) in the mother plant, not just the seed itself. Any viable seed from a plant that would exceed 0.3 percent total THC is no longer hemp: it is federally classified as marijuana. Interstate shipping, selling, or even simple possession across state lines of those seeds becomes a federal crime for the average person. Result: The entire cannabis drug plant seed industry that exploded after 2018 is federally shut down. You can still do it inside fully legal states (intrastate), but the free flow of stabilized genetics across the country is over. Clones and tissue culture might still sneak through for now. That is the only remaining loophole, and you can bet it will be closed next. 5. The Psychological Operations Perception management: They flooded the market with exotic polyhybrid drops labeled “F1” so people would chase novelty instead of preserving real IBLs. Now those same people defend the unstable seeds they paid two hundred dollars for as valuable while the real stable medicine quietly becomes illegal to share. Learned helplessness: Once you cannot legally get diverse seeds anymore, you either go fully black-market (risk), pay premium licensed prices from big players, or switch to clones from corporate catalogs. Self-reliance dies. Divide and conquer: Home growers versus big cannabis companies. The little guy who just wants his own stabilized lines is painted as the problem while the real capture happens at the seed level. Loss aversion: People who have been hoarding polyhybrids will freak out and double down on what they already have instead of fighting for open access to IBLs. 6. What Losing Access to Ancestral Medicine Actually Means You lose the living library of genetics that humans have selected for millennia for consistent high-THC medicine.You lose the ability to breed your own consistent medicine for pain, sleep, anxiety, or spiritual work. Instead you get whatever patented polyhybrid the big companies decide to release that year, often with higher CBD or lower potency because it is easier to standardize and patent. The PLoS ONE data already shows the amalgamation is complete in the commercial market. The 2026 changes lock it in nationwide: the last remnants of anything outside that homogenized soup become federally restricted. You lose sovereignty over your own nervous system and consciousness. That is the ultimate control mechanism: when the plant that has been humanity’s ally for thousands of years becomes a yearly subscription product from a handful of corporations.The corn farmers never saw it coming until it was too late. The cannabis community has about six months left before the trap snaps shut on November 12, 2026. Start growing out and preserving the stabilized IBL lines you already have right now. Share them locally while you still can. And recognize the pattern, because once you see the playbook you stop playing the game they designed for you.
The_7_Club
The_7_Club commented11d ago
https://youtu.be/w8TnDAerM0E?is=rQcIwuKv8Evv2hX4
Condocannibus
Condocannibus commented2mo ago
The heritage club still hasn't got back to me wrote twice last week. Right now for baby girl person just needs to learn the basics on how to grow. I would love to try to help her just grow a plant to harvest then she will be able to grow on her own I can't pass on genetics but I can give her a little know how. But I do beleive good genetics for meds is best no arguments. Just trying to assist a fellow person in need. If you could help me with these genetics I would be very grateful.
The_7_Club
The_7_Club commented2mo ago
@Condocannibus, I asked my contact at the club they said they didn't have any emails unanswered. So it must be a failure on your end. Try using a different email account. You may have been flagged for suspicious behavior/spam.
The_7_Club
The_7_Club commented1mo ago
🦇⚡
Comment by The_7_Club photo #1Comment by The_7_Club photo #2
CCGS1mon
CCGS1mon commented2mo ago
^^
The_7_Club
The_7_Club commented3mo ago
🌹🥀
Comment by The_7_Club photo #1
The_7_Club
The_7_Club commented3mo ago
🦇🍷🦇
Comment by The_7_Club photo #1
The_7_Club
The_7_Club commented4mo ago
💖
Comment by The_7_Club photo #1
The_7_Club
The_7_Club commented4mo ago
🦇⚡
Comment by The_7_Club photo #1
The_7_Club
The_7_Club commented4mo ago
👑
Comment by The_7_Club photo #1