Good morning, Stroock's Books weekenders.
We got in a Judaism last night. Our first in a while, actually. Changes in the works.
Happy Victory Day, Comrades.
Even without the flag and tie we manage to look so Soviet in that pic, or Ruski, anyway.We remain baffled as to how our Triglyceride levels spiked from 204 to 692 in ten months. Glucose is up, slightly. We eat no differently than we did last July. Stress? We dunno. Devotees will recall last summer's AC Wars. Those were so stressful that Mrs. Stroock took the phone from us because she thought we were about to stroke-out.
We are up about ten pounds. But this is muscle. We know this because last summer we benched 230 and now we bench 300. And our pants fit us the same and we're wearing belts we have to punch a whole into, so they're tight enough, not loose enough.
So, alert reader(s) will have noticed we've been going to the doctor a lot lately. We'll be going to the doctor a lot more for examinations and tests. Two more are in the works. One Thursday, one at the end of the month. This blog will deliver health updates as events warrant.
War of the ants...very little ant activity yesterday and we've yet to see one this morning. The little bastards are probably regrouping. They're clever.
Well, Labour lost 1,416 seats in Britain's local elections, the Tories lost 659 and Reform picked up over 1,500. The Greens and 'Muslim Independent Parties' also gained seats. As Mark Steyn says, the future is showing up. Labour's shellacking is nice to see, but we doubt it will amount to much in the long run. Prime Minister Keir Starmer says he won't step down. Honestly, those of us who loath the man should encourage him to remain in Number Ten for further torturing. Things will only get worse.
The Things.
We are bored with Substack and sorely tempted to return to Twitter and do on Twitter what we do on Substack. We dunno.
Okay, we had a great week with World War 1990: The Managua Campaign. Both Task Force Bolivar and the FDN have broken through and are proceeding south toward Managua. We're still not sure what happens next. Maybe we have both groups arrive on the outskirts of Managua and then...standoff.
World War 1990: The Managua Campaign is 48,000 words.
