Although I checked the time this morning at 5:05 a.m. following a trip to the bathroom, I returned to bed and did my best to try for further sleep before my 6 a.m. alarm chimed.
My morning's primary agenda was the hobble to do some grocery shopping at No Frills about a half mile from here once it had opened at 8 a.m. I would also be withdrawing $200 first from a Vancity credit union quite close by the store.
It was a few minutes before 8 a.m. when I left home. All was wet outside from earlier rain, and the overcast sky was doing its best to try to renew the rain it was pregnant with.
All went well; and I got back home to find my younger brother already watching T.V. news shows. As usual, though, I did not join him until after 9 a.m.
Incidentally, I had noticed my wife's car parked in the driveway, so she had gotten home last night after I had retired. It was to happen that she only had to work the latter part of today, so she never emerged from her bedroom until nigh or even slightly after 2:30 p.m.
As for T.V. with my brother, upon getting his invitation to begin operation of our Android TV Box, I led us off with two short videos, both uploaded to YouTube's William Makis (Official Channel):
- 2025-12-13 Scott Adams is now paralyzed and has been abandoned by his Kaiser doctors (7:40) Uploaded yesterday
Scott Adams, who has aggressive Stage 4 Prostate Cancer is now paralyzed and has been abandoned by Kaiser!
Not only did they give him the wrong cancer treatments (Pluvicto + Anktiva), they ignored his “Right to Try” (he should have received Ivermectin, Mebendazole in combination with chemo or Pluvicto)
and have essentially abandoned him at this point. Scott can’t even reach his Kaiser doctors.
This is how cancer patients are treated in America.
I am so frustrated right now!
- Florida Surgeon General Dr.Joseph Ladapo discusses my Cancer Research work and new Florida funding! (1:48) Uploaded today
Florida Surgeon General Dr.Joseph Ladapo discusses my Cancer research work and new Florida funding for studying repurposed drugs in Cancer.
From interview by Jan Jekielek, American Thought Leaders, aired Oct.4, 2025
Thereafter, we only watched one further video due to its length. At nearly 2½ hours (2:26:04), it had been streamed December 11 to Rumble's Vaccine Safety Research Foundation channel: Episode 207: Time To Recall The mRNA Vaccines.
This week on VSRF Live, we welcome Dr. Robert R. Redfield, M.D., former Director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and a member of the White House Coronavirus Task Force from 2018–2021, for one of the most consequential conversations we’ve hosted to date.
A career virologist, physician, and longtime HIV researcher, Dr. Redfield spent decades at Walter Reed Army Medical Center before co-founding the Institute of Human Virology at the University of Maryland. His lifetime of work in infectious disease, combined with his firsthand experience inside the federal pandemic response, gives him a uniquely authoritative perspective on how U.S. public health decisions are made.
In recent months, Dr. Redfield has stepped forward with increasingly urgent concerns about mRNA COVID-19 vaccines. He now publicly supports a full recall of the mRNA products, citing safety signals that emerged early and were never adequately addressed. His willingness to challenge the very system he once led marks a profound shift in the national conversation about vaccine safety, transparency, and accountability.
On VSRF Live, we will discuss:
Why Dr. Redfield believes the mRNA vaccines should be pulled from the market
What data and early indicators raised red flags inside federal agencies
How scientific debate—and suppression—shaped the pandemic response
His concerns about biosafety and gain-of-function research
What reforms are urgently needed to restore public trust in health institutions
What he sees as the most important lessons moving forward
Dr. Redfield’s vantage point, both inside and outside the public-health establishment, offers rare insight into what happened, what went wrong, and what must change.
I admit that Dr. Redfield came across as a convincingly sympathetic figure. However, I do not know that he is being absolutely sincere; he may just be doing his damnedest to distance himself from his past bad actions.
Anyway, after the video my brother returned to his bedroom for more rest. I knew he was going to be replenishing his beer supply, so I wanted to ensure I rode along and also bought more. Thus, I did not eat a meal, and instead was back to bed fully clothed to nap as best as I could.
I think I was to bed ahead of noon, but it was probably close to or around 1:30 p.m. when I roused.
I was too late. I was to find that my brother had already gone and would anon be returning with another box of two dozen beers for himself and a four-litre box of the white wine Bev prefers.
Feeling hungry, I fixed up a reasonably-sized meal, and ate that here at my bedside computer. My wife was to finally emerge from her bedroom to have a shower and whatnot.
I fully expected that she would ignore me and leave for work without venturing conversation, but I was wrong. She needed money, so it suited her to be social enough to place her ... request ... for $100, despite still owing me $300 from her previous beseechment a few weeks ago.
I was glad to have been in a position to be able to give her the money, but I doubt that I am going to go unscathed for my generosity.
She left for work around 3:20 p.m., but never gave me a goodbye.
Between the burden of the late meal and the disheartenment of my financial plight, I found myself unable to go through with the usual light exercising I would have engaged in my wife's vacant bedroom before it got too dark this afternoon.
To be honest, I only wanted to do some drinking.
Toward that end, I am going to break now at 5:06 p.m. from blogging. My supper is only going to be three pieces of fruit, for I feel I deserve nothing more due to my inactivity.
I wish I wasn't so alone in my sorry waning life.
⭘⭘⭘⭘⭘⭘
With some reluctance, I risked a 2019 movie that filled me with doubt: One Fine Christmas. My source was this GOOJARA.to link.
The opening was questionable, for sure; but I became quickly caught up in the various independent storylines. And honestly, I shed so many damned tears deep into the movie all the way to its conclusion.
I loved it!
I held myself to the last glass tumbler remaining of Wayne Gretzky Estates Whisky Oak Aged Vintage 2020 Wine (14.2% alcohol). The 750-ml bottle was quantity enough for three pretty much equal glass tumblers-full. Basically, over 8⅓ ounces per glass.
What a surprise actress Kristin Leigh was as a Japanese bride brought home by her Black military husband to his American family who never even knew he had married.
I suppose the movie finished around 7:21 p.m., and it sounded to be raining rather seriously outside.
My brother returned from social drinking at 7:51 p.m.
No way I could end my evening feeling as lugubrious as this movie had me feeling, so it was on to something else ─ and a can of Cariboo Malt (7.9% alcohol)
I tuned in Legacies ─ episode 10 ("There's a World Where Your Dreams Came True") of the first season. My source was another GOOJARA.to link.
It was rather cool seeing blonde twin "Lizzie" with a totally lead storyline for a change. Most of the elements of my earlier emotional low washed away.
I suppose the episode ended around 8:45 p.m.
I was not done, though.
And so I returned to a series I have not watched in a half dozen or so years ─ Harlots. I kept no record of where I left off, so I have begun from the first episode of season two. My source was this uFLIX.to link.
And I had a second can of beer.
Possibly some few portions were familiar. I used to watch the series in the evening whilst drinking with my brother, so between the strong English accents and the alcohol, most has been forgotten. Natheless, I shall carry on from this point and keep with the series to its completion.
At the episode's conclusion, I realized that my wife was likely home. Upon opening my bedroom door as I worked at completing this blog post, she came up the stairs from laundering and ─ seeing me not having actually gone to bed for the night ─ she asked if I was hungry.
She had prepared a simple dish of egg and parsley or some such, and white rice was also available. Initially I declined, but then I rethought and had a fairly small indulgence.
Originally I had intended getting up at 3 a.m. for the outing to the nearby elementary school playground for some exercise, but that is no longer likely. I will just set my cellphone alarm for 6 a.m. and rely upon a session of exercise out in the backyard tool shed around 7:30 a.m. when there is sufficient daylight.
Right now it is 11:04 p.m. and I am about to practice dental hygiene, finish up whatever I must here on my beside computer, and call it a night.

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