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Moles Are Caused By A Parasitic Mushroom In Certain Foods

  • Writer: I Finished Elementary
    I Finished Elementary
  • May 3, 2024
  • 1 min read

Updated: Jan 3







Moles on the human body tend to proliferate like "fairy rings," or mushroom growth patterns of certain fungi. Human moles are related to the species of mushroom which infects certain plants: Mainly trees, coffee, and cocoa.

This fungus is mainly known for creating knots in trees. Humans are infected by this monstrous parasite mainly from wine, which is aged in wood barrels, coffee, and chocolate.

Humans have a subconscious wiring to color harmful things orange or red. The most infected coffees usually come in red cups. This is easily verifiable. The employees at Tim Horton's are much more infected with the mushroom than Starbucks employees.

Once the skin shows a proliferation of moles, it is almost too late, the whole body; internally: Is infected and interconnected with the parasitic mushroom.

I'm the only human being on planet earth who knows this. Who has discovered this. Who has the IQ to make these kinds of connections. Who did the hard work to prove this.


I am a freaking genius.

Coffee, wine, and chocolate are the main carriers of this parasitic mushroom which, when it colonizes itself in the human body, sends out fruiting bodies to the skin for unknown reasons. The more moles, the less personal "freedom" one has over one's actions.

What is the cure for moles? Not ingesting coffee, chocolate and wine. An act that becomes virtually impossible as this mushroom is literally fused and one with its human host. There are herbs and plants that can kill the mushroom but most of these, as far as I know, are toxic to humans.

 
 
 

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