Updated 2 years ago

Trump would tell these people to go make him a taco, but I’m not sure what ingredients they would put in it.
I would posit there are “good people” on both sides, but as is typical in these kinds of affairs, witchcraft and sorcery are being used by both sides. Maybe one side will accuse the other of “voodoo economics.”
Do your shaman’s (or your doctor’s) personal beliefs and political agenda really matter? Probably not.
No matter what, though, I would caution against paying thousands of dollars to fly down to a retreat and drinking ayahuasca made by the guy in the video with the little gold crown looking skull hat – he probably sticks Datura in his brew (Jimson Weed, which witches would rub on their broomsticks – no, not going to elaborate on that), probably overcharges and underdelivers, and will probably grab you right in the crotch when you least need to have that happen. The only thing worse than that guy is an American who puts “shaman” on his business card.
You know we are in 2020 when we need Yelp to cover these people. And probably the FDA. (Not a joke; it’s legal in the U.S. now and coming to a church near you)
But no matter what, I predict that there will indeed be mass vomiting come November.
