Affiliate Disclaimer

As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. I may also earn from some of the other companies mentioned in this post.

Who am I?

I am an obscure great-great-grandson of Oscar Adolphe Barcelo & Eugenie Beaudry of MontrΓ©al.

And I am an equally obscure great-grandson of George Henry Leandre Barcelo & Sarah Anne Bird of Winnipeg (Manitoba) and Langdon (North Dakota).

Wednesday, 12 July 2023

Silenced

With less than 15 minutes over four hours to my credit overnight as 'sleep', I rose at 1:45 a.m. to begin readying for my five-mile walk. I definitely felt much better than the night previous.

It was maybe 2:13 a.m. once I was on my way into a night nicely tinged with some cool to the air. I had weighed myself sans my jacket, and registered around 191 pounds. Even so, I only managed the usual number of repetitions in the six sets of pull-ups and chin-ups that I engaged early into the walk at an elementary school playground ─ four repetitions in the first set, and two repetitions in the remaining five sets. And of course, I held the very final repetition for a 10-count.

Fortunately, I had little of note to mention concerning the outing. About a mile into it, a guy on a bicycle sneaked up behind me to query if I had any ... and he identified something I could not understand ... to sell.

It didn't matter what it was that he was seeking ─ I have no brook with any drug except alcohol.

The only other incident of note was when I was walking along Green Timbers Way (Google Map). I had turned onto it from 96th Avenue and was nearly to the Surrey Nature Centre when an emergency vehicle that was probably travelling Fraser Highway and had its siren blaring, elicited a response from some coyote deep in the woods to my left ─ in other words, between me and the Fraser Highway.

The coyote responded with at least seven of its own wails, and may have been joined once by a companion coyote. I am sure that any homeless people camped anywhere nearby in the woods would surely have taken some interest.

It was 4:13 a.m. by the time I was back home outside the locked front door. But before I came inside, I spent a half hour or so watering garden plants in the front yard.

By the time I had finished and then came into the house and was coming upstairs to my bedroom, I could hear my eldest stepson rustling about downstairs, apparently with a 6 a.m. 12-hour shift at distant Tree Island Steel.

I shut myself up into my bedroom to allow him to ready himself for his day unimpeded.

I never managed to get back to bed until a little after 6 a.m.; and my actual morning commenced a mite over two hours later when I rose.

Once my younger brother and I got together for some mid-morning T.V. via our Android TV Box, I led us off with the 56-minute New Zealand documentary (from earlier this year) titled Silenced ─ three Rumble sources are here, here, and here.

Silenced - a documentary from Candlelight Productions NZ Were hundreds of thousands of Kiwis truly misled down a rabbit hole of disinformation, driving a wedge through our society during our pandemic response? ...or were fair and important points pushed from the public domain? Broadcaster Peter Williams, self-deregistered GP of 40 years Dr Anne O'Reilly and freelance sociologist Jodie Bruning share their perspectives on how New Zealand's freedom of speech in media, medicine and academia was impacted by suppression over the last three years.
.
Source: "https://www.silenced.co.nz/"

The only other video we were to watch was a little more than an hour (1:03:54), and had been added to BitChute's Mercola channel two days ago: The Uncensored History of AIDS- Interview with Celia Farber.

In this video, I interview journalist Celia Farber about her recently republished book, "Serious Adverse Events: An Uncensored History of AIDS." As a young reporter working for SPIN magazine, Farber started questioning the official narrative around AIDS, and this book is the outgrowth of her decades-long investigation into and writing about this "hot potato" topic.

Journalist Celia Farber is the author of “Serious Adverse Events: An Uncensored History of AIDS.” In it, she highlights the work of virologist and retrobiologist Peter Duesberg, who since 1987 has insisted that HIV doesn’t cause AIDS
According to Duesberg, retroviruses such as HIV are harmless and do not cause disease. And, up until Dr. Robert Gallo claimed he’d discovered HIV in his laboratory in 1984, and determined that it caused AIDS, this was the scientific consensus
Duesberg was vehemently attacked by AIDS researchers and activists, and internationally discredited by media for not going along with the AIDS narrative promoted by the medical establishment, led by Dr. Anthony Fauci
As with COVID-19, one of the key tools used to promote the “HIV causes AIDS” narrative was the use of the PCR test. There are also other similarities to what happened with COVID, including the vilification and discrediting of scientists and therapies that could effectively address the disease
Bactrim was an inexpensive generic drug that effectively treated AIDS-related pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, which was frequently fatal. This drug, like ivermectin, was withheld. Instead, Fauci insisted AIDS patients be treated with AZT, a horrendously toxic and expensive cancer drug that was never proven to work, and which killed an estimated 300,000 AIDS patients, most of them gay men

This was a very good interview!

I am finding myself spare on further blogging time, for it is already 7:30 p.m., and I have another five-mile walk intended for overnight ─ I must have some supper and be set to shut myself up in my bedroom in case my brother returns from his daily socializing earlier than usual. I cannot become embroiled in watching any T.V. with him, for I must sensibly get to bed by 9:30 p.m. or so.

I want to report that I had a naked weigh-in a short time ago, and was 186 pounds ─ a pound heavier than I was early last evening when I had stripped down for a bath.

I managed some afternoon sunning in the backyard ─ no less than 63 minutes. As of this past weekend, I have finally been seeing some honey bees ─ I never saw a trace of any all the month of June, and was beginning to think that they were extinct hereabouts.

Anyway, I think that is enough for today's post.

No comments:

Post a Comment