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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).

Friday, 20 September 2024

Haywire

Following last evening's walk, I arrived back home to find that my wife had preceded me ─ she was behaving after work that particular evening, obviously.

By the time I dressed down and joined my brother to watch some T.V., I awaited a short time for his invitation to put our Android TV Box to use, and then noticed that he was passed out. So I took control of the T.V. and used our Android TV Box to select The Orville ─ episode five ("A Tale of Two Topas") of season three.

My brother roused as soon as the episode began.

I was struck by some exceptional acting in the episode, and how emotionally affecting it was. Heck, despite nobody dying, I did not mind at all that ─ if I am remembering correctly ─ commercial-free, the episode exceeded 75 minutes.

Young Imani Pullum as the episode's titular youngster Topa was absolutely stellar and heart-warming.

Due to its length, I am pleased with myself for taking my time in drinking my first of three Cariboo Malts (8% alcohol), for I was able to make it last quite close to an hour.

The next show we watched was Yellowstone ─ the season three finale episode 10 ("The World Is Purple").

Even more superb entertainment ─ and quite the cliff-hanger conclusion!

After my brother retired to his bedroom for the night and I repaired here to my bedside computer, it may have been nigh 3 a.m. before I managed to get to bed.

I rose once in the night as the dark was receding and used the bathroom, but my morning commenced shortly after 8 a.m. ─ before 8:30 a.m., at any rate.

And because my brother never emerged from his bedroom until a little after 9 a.m., I already had possession of the T.V. and a video set to play. Streamed yesterday, it was not too very short of 2½ hours (2:23:11), and was at Rumble's Vaccine Safety Research Foundation channel: VSRF Live #144: Diseases, Vaccines & Forgotten History with Dr. Suzanne Humphries, MD.

On this week’s VSRF LIVE Steve sits down with Dr. Suzanne Humphries, M.D. a licensed nephrologist, practicing in Maine and Virginia. Dr. Humphries is co-author of Dissolving Illusions: Disease, Vaccines, and the Forgotten History. Additionally, Dr. Humphries has lectured extensively throughout Scandinavia, the USA and New Zealand on vaccines, holistic health, infant immunity, the role of vitamin C in medicine, infectious diseases, and the human microbiome.

In her groundbreaking book, Dissolving Illusions, Dr. Humphries makes the compelling case that the precipitous decline in lethal infections, once feared in the Western world, is due more to the adoption of safer, healthier societal habits than that of medical interventions. She makes the case that prior to the 20th century, most of the history of the western world involved famine, poverty and filth, all of which Dr. Humphries believes led to the high infection mortality at the time. Today, we are told that medical interventions such as vaccines were the cause of improved health and increased lifespans beginning in the modern age, but Humphries convincingly argues the opposite.

Prefacing Dr. Suzanne Humphries' appearance, much of the early part of the show was an interview with badly vaccine-injured Alexis Lorenze still lying in her hospital bed. Nearly the entire show revolved around the poor thing, in fact. The video description should have been edited to account for this.

Anyway, the video ran long enough that my brother and I watched nothing else, and he then sought some bed rest before leaving afoot to catch a bus and head off to a pub to play pool and drink beer.

My wife had a full workday scheduled at the Thai restaurant where she is employed part-time, so she emerged from her bedroom around 9:35 - 9:40 a.m. and shortly after 10 a.m. was away on her fairly long drive.

I have a wee a.m. five-mile+ walk for which I intend to rise at 1:30 a.m. to begin readying for, so I do not expect to be seeing her later. It is best that I seek to be in bed by 9:30 p.m. or soon thereafter.

There was sufficient sunshine in the afternoon that I could have benefitted from sitting outside in the backyard, but my early afternoon nap brought me to just about 3 p.m., and I felt disinclined to expend the time when I have so much else to do ─ such as blogging, something I had yet to begin.

There was some hankering later for a Christmas movie and two or three cans of Cariboo Malt, but reason ruled and I knew that I would regret it when the time came for my walk overnight.

Still, there was some such desire for something. So early into the evening I had my supper while watching Superman & Lois ─ episode four ("Haywire") of season one. It was pretty darned good.

At finishing my supper, I then had myself a can of Cariboo Malt to drink over the remainder of the episode.

I took notice that Lana actress Emmanuelle Chriqui looks darned good in tight jeans ─ she fills 'em right out!

If interested, I watched the episode on my computer at this M4uHD.net link.

It is presently 8:10 p.m., and with my supper now behind me, my Sabbath fast will be commencing shortly at dark. I might as well call this post complete and be set to get to bed sensibly awhile later. I happen to be home alone.

Ooops! I no sooner wrote that than I heard my brother come into the house. Nevertheless, he will be watching T.V. on his own.

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