Monthly Archives: January 2025

Reckoning ahead four years – from 1/21/25…

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Welcome to the “Georgia Wasp…”

This blog is modeled on the Carolina Israelite. That was an old-time newspaper – more like a personal newsletter – written and published by Harry Golden. Back in the 1950s, people called Harry a  “voice of sanity amid the braying of jackals.” (For his work on the Israelite.)

That’s now my goal as well. To be a “voice of sanity amid the braying of jackals.”

For more on the blog-name connection, see the notes below.

In the meantime:

January 21, 2025 – I’m trying to take the high road. Trying to think that maybe – just maybe – in their collective wisdom the Sovereign People made a good choice last November. In the alternative I’m just hoping the next four years won’t be as bad as lots of people think. I’m writing this so I can check back on January 20, 2029, and see whose prognostications proved correct. (And to the extent possible I’ll try to stay out of the crossfire.) But it’s tough.

Robert Reich for one doesn’t hold out much hope, as I discovered this past week when I ran across his video, Why Trump Won … YouTube. (He said basically that Trump won by expressing the anger and frustration of the vast-majority of working class Americans, while at the same time planning policies to increase things like corporate welfare, meaning most of those who voted for Trump will be in the same position, if not worse off, four years from now.)

After that I did some lateral reading. That led me to these other posts: Economist Robert Reich ‘goes back 4 decades’ to explain why Trump ‘isn’t the cause’ of US dysfunction, and Robert B. Reich: Will Trump get credit for Biden’s successes? (I wouldn’t be surprised if he did.) Next – from a hot tip – I Googled “shove the presidency down trump’s throat,” and found these posts: Shove the Presidency Down Trump’s Throat – Yahoo News, and a review of that post, ‘Real job stress’: Democrats handed fresh advice. Finally I found this from Rolling Stone magazine, American Authoritarianism. How Bad Will It Get Under Trump?

One thing Rolling Stone said was that despite the Constitution’s two-term limit – the 22nd Amendment – Trump will try to stay in office “for life.” On the other hand (they said), America’s system of federalism offers hope: “Many things are going to be terrible. But controlling the federal government doesn’t mean you’re controlling everything.” Author Tim Dickinson exhorted Americans to support local institutions that uphold democratic norms and strengthen them.

Defending those institutions will give proponents of America’s democratic experiment their best shot at recovery, when the MAGA movement stumbles. Here, Trump’s age and lack of a clear successor offers some hope. “He’s old, so at some point, age is going to make a difference… There will be a power struggle. The next opportunity will be when he dies in office.”

Then too I recently started reading Stephanie Grisham’s book, I’ll Take Your Questions Now (“What I saw at the Trump White House”), for clues about what to expect coming up in “Trump 2.” (Page 7 talked about Trump’s appeal to voters, page 36 talked about the revolving-door chiefs of staff, and page 22 talked about Mitt Romney’s experience: “I don’t know how aware he was at that point about Trump’s slow, deliberate torture of him or if he was a particularly vengeful man. But in the years to come he would find ways to get back at Trump.” Hmmm…)

Meanwhile, I have a few thoughts of my own. Some I expressed in past posts, like April 2019’s On “why I don’t like Donald Trump.” Also, August 2019’s On “why it might be better…” (Gasp!) As in, why it might have been better if Trump had been reelected in 2020. (Legitimately that is. For one thing, he would have been leaving office on 1/20/25.) Then too, as things started looking more bleak (for many Americans), this from August 2023, On a second Trump term.

I’ll be checking and re-checking those in the months and years to come.

Other thoughts: Like, that Trump will have a Honeymoon Period, the “period of popularity enjoyed by a new leader,” but that period is getting shorter; recently down to seven months, “from an average of 26 months earlier in American history.” For another thing, there’s the Paradox of Leadership: Why We Build Up Only to Tear Down: As soon as Americans elevate a new leader to high office, “we seem equally driven to bring them down… The fall from grace, then, is almost inevitable.” Third, in my view the Sovereign People hired Trump to do one thing: Fix the economy. Bring prices down, make it easier – or even possible – for today’s young people to buy a home of their own, and pay reasonable prices for food, housing and gas.

To the extent he can do that, he’ll succeed. Otherwise, there will be a day of reckoning

In the meantime, on to more pleasant things. Like, this August I’ll be hiking the Canterbury Trail in England, more formally known as the Pilgrims’ Way. My companions and I will start the 120-miles-or-so hike in Winchester. (And on to the shrine of Thomas Becket at Canterbury in Kent.) Along the way and while in London I’ll wear my Dodger hat with the prominent “LA.” But to ward off rude remarks and puzzled questions. I’ll also wear this button. (But hidden, maybe under a lapel, ready to flash, “just in case.”) It’ll pay to be careful in the upcoming months and years…

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May include: A round button features the text 'DON'T BLAME ME I VOTED FOR KAMALA' in red and blue lettering on a white background. The words 'DON'T BLAME ME' are in red, while 'I VOTED FOR KAMALA' is in blue.  The button is a political campaign accessory expressing support for Kamala Harris.

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The upper image is courtesy of Fortune Teller Image – Image Results. See also Prediction, Forecasting, and Nostradamus, all from Wikipedia. Here’s another interesting post – maybe to review in four years – How Donald Trump Won the 2024 Election | TIME, for comparison purposes.

About that word in the title: The verb “reckoning” means the action or process of calculating or estimating something, as in something coming up in the future? See Collins English Dictionary for variable and countable nouns, and synonyms. Also Merriam-Webster, about a settling of accounts or calculating a ship’s position.

Re: “Crossfire.” The actual idiom is Caught in the crossfire – Idioms by The Free Dictionary. Literally it means to be caught “in the middle of an exchange of gunfire.” Or affected by or made to be involved in a conflict “one is not a part of,” but of course, as an American citizen and thus part of the Sovereign People, I’ll be very much involved in the upcoming events.

Re: The economy. The Reich YouTube video included a graph showing the economy (80%) as second only to immigration (90%) as the top issues that mattered most to voters.

Re: Lateral reading. The link, Best media literacy tip to vet credible sources from the Poynter Institute.

Re: “Honeymoon.” I Googled “Biden’s honeymoon period” and got links like How Joe Biden’s approval ratings looked across four years, Biden Honeymoon Unlikely Despite Early Challenges – U.S. News, and The president’s “first 100 days” is a myth — Biden included | Vox. There’s some interesting reading there; I’ll be checking them in the coming months and years.

Also re: Checking and re-checking. I’ll also do that for things like the Consumer Price Index, the rate of inflation and the prices of gas and a dozen eggs. See News Releases, from January 15, 2015 (CPI), AAA Fuel Prices, from 1/21/25 ($3.12 on average), Is there an egg shortage? Here’s why prices are up, from 1/9/25 (“up to $3.65 in November versus $3.37 in October and $2.14 in November 2023”), and What is the current inflation rate in the US? – USAFacts. (2.7 percent as of November 2024).

The lower image is courtesy of Dont Blame Me I Voted for Kamala 1.25 Button. ($2.25, plus shipping. There’s also one for $6.99, A stylized “Vote,” followed by “Don’t look at me. I didn’t vote for him.” See also Don’t Blame Me, I Voted For Harris | www.splicetoday.com.

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Re:  The Israelite.  Harry Golden grew up in the Jewish ghetto of New York City, but eventually moved to Charlotte, North Carolina.  Thus the “Carolina Israelite.”  I on the other hand am a “classic 73-year-old “WASP” – White Anglo-Saxon Protestant – and live in north Georgia.  Thus the “Georgia Wasp.”    

Anyway, in North Carolina Harry wrote and published the “israelite” from the 1940s through the 1960s.  He was a “cigar-smoking, bourbon-loving raconteur.”  (He told good stories.) That also means if he was around today, the “Israelite would be done as a blog.”  But what made Harry special was his positive outlook on life.  As he got older but didn’t turn sour, like many do today.  He still got a kick out of life.  For more on the blog-name connection, see “Wasp” and/or The blog.

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An Updated (2025) “Geezer Guide…”

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Holy Cow! I haven’t done a blog post here for 36 days! (Since November 30, 2024?)

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January 5, 2025 – So the last time I posted was November 30, 2024? “Holy cow!” (An allusion to the famous “Harry Caray” meme, or at least famous to devout baseball fans.)

But in the time since November 30 I’ve 1) taken a 10-day, 2,000 mile road trip up to Springfield MA (and back), 2) taken six hours of train rides (one long Sunday, 12/15) down to New York City and back, 3) seen the play Chicago at the Ambassador Theater just off Broadway, and 4) gone through a process of preparing for and enduring two family Christmases, one on the day itself and one three days later for the whole extended family. (Including out-of-towners.)

So yeah, I’ve been busy…

But seriously, this post will continue a series I started back in 2018, mostly on what dietary supplements will help me stay good and healthy in old age. (And that was before my December 2021 post, “Will I REALLY live to 120?”) But now it’s time for another update, mostly because my oldest brother – who turns 80 in February – just got diagnosed with prostate cancer. (For which he is now in the middle of radiation treatments.)

That news got my attention because another brother – who died in 2007 – had prostate cancer. My father had it too, but he died in 2012, at the ripe old age of 95. Meaning there is hope, but I’d rather not get to that age – or 120 for that matter – “sans prostate.” The point being that all this led me to do more research on supplements beyond the Boron and Selenium I’ve been taking since 2018. (Selenium in the form of two Brazil nuts daily; they’re a great natural source.) But as turns out, that ketchup I’ve been scarfing liberally for all these years – a version of “nectar of the gods” – has been a big help. (See the Notes for the results of my last PSA test.)

You see, ketchup comes from tomatoes, and tomatoes are a rich source of Lycopene. In turn, Lycopene helps keep prostate cancer at bay, but a lot depends of what tomato product you use. It turns out that the “fresh from the garden” version isn’t all that great, but tomato paste is one of the best sources. Thus my resolve to get two tablespoons of tomato paste each day.

Which solves that problem, but since 2021 I’ve made a troubling new discovery “harmful to health.” Microplastics and Nanoplastics. They’re a big problem even in those teabags I’ve used for years. (As a “healthy” alternative to coffee?) Which led to more assiduous research, by which I found that one of the best ways to get rid of the nasty little beasties is simple: Boil water and run it through a coffee filter. And no more plastic water bottles. I drink from either a glass bottle or a large stainless steel cup. (The latter means I can get my morning iced coffee at RaceTrac, as a refill, for either a dollar less or – many times – for free. “Go on, you’re good!”)

But glass bottles have downsides too, mostly having to do with difficulties in recycling. Aluminum cans are much easier to recycle, so these days I get a nightly beer from a can, chilled in the freezer 30 minutes, then poured into a chilled glass. “Ah, the things I do to keep the environment healthy!” (There are also those Splurge Days when I get a two-draft-beer buzz at whatever sports bar I find myself near, often on road trips like the one up to Springfield.)

So that’s the update for January 2025, but I’m sure I’ll be doing more research in the future. (Since those darn scientists keep finding more and more things that are bad for us.) In the meantime, here’s a look back at some of those other supplements I’ve been taken. First, about that Boron: Men with high boron levels are “65 percent less likely to develop prostate cancer,” but American men on average have one of the lowest boron intakes in the world. Then there are those Brazil nuts: “No other single nutrient appears to prevent cancer more effectively than Selenium…  It basically forces cancer cells to self-destruct.”

You can get more detail in that Updated ‘Geezer Guide,’ from March 2021, but here’s a short list: 1) Calcium, something most American men don’t get enough of but which helps keep away that pot belly (it helps with weight control and keeps bones strong); 2) Coenzyme Q10, for help against cancer, Parkinson’s disease, heart disease – and is “packed with free-radical-fighting antioxidants, which can slow the signs of aging.” And speaking of not aging, there’s the idea, “Eat a third less, extend your life by a third.” (For more detail see More on living a longer, healthier life, including information on Autophagy, a type of intermittent fasting, the “body’s way of cleaning out damaged cells, in order to regenerate newer, healthier cells.”) Fourth, I also take Glucosamine Chondroitin to protect my joints (especially ankles and knees):

You don’t have the same amount of cartilage in your joints that you had at 19. To reverse the damage and actually rebuild cartilage, take glucosamine, made from the shells of crabs and lobsters. How much? 1,500 mg a day. Brands that combine glucosamine with chondroitin are fine.

Fifth, Vitamin E, which the Mayo Clinic says is “important to vision, reproduction, and the health of your blood, brain and skin.” Sources say Vitamin E is a potent antioxidant and “may help reduce the risk of certain eye diseases, heart disease, cancer, even Alzheimer’s.” Some studies show that “E” also reduces “muscle damage after exercise.” On the down side, most people get just a fraction of that Vitamin E from their diets.

One final note: I just read this bit of news: World’s oldest person, Japanese woman Tomiko Itooka, dies at 116. Needless to say, I hope to break that record – by at least four years…

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No Schwarzenegger body for me. I just want to stick around a while yet… 

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The upper image is courtesy of Holy Cow Harry Caray Images – Image Results. For more see also Harry Caray – Wikipedia, and Holy cow (expression) – Wikipedia.

An e-Bibliography for this post: An Updated ‘Geezer Guide to Supplements,’ from March 2021, and its predecessor posts, A Geezer’s guide to supplements and A Geezer’s guide to supplements – Part II (both from July 23, 2018), and More on living a longer, healthier life, from December 2022.

Re: “Sans.” According to Wiktionary, the free dictionary, as a preposition the word means “without” or “lacking.” The etymology: “From Middle English saunzsans, borrowed from Old French sanssenzsens, from Latin sine (‘without’) conflated with absēns (‘absent, remote’). Compare French sansItalian senzaPortuguese sem, and Spanish sin.

Re: Results of my last PSA test. (Probably boring to most people, except “men of a certain age,” along with their family and loved ones.) Taken November 1, 2024, it showed a level of “1.” (Actually 1.04, but some people mistook that as a a reading of “one hundred and four.”) According to PSA Levels By Age Chart: Normal, High Range & Scores, that’s pretty dang good. Despite the fact that the normal range of PSA levels tends to increase as a man ages – “with some minor variation between races” – my level is half the maximum for a 40 year old. (Zero to 2 or 2.5.) For a white male aged 70 to 79 the normal range goes from Zero up to 6.5. And by the way, I’m hoping to use all this data for the update I’m planning, for 2031, of Live to 120, and – Lord willing – 2041, 2051 and beyond?

Re: Benefits of tomato paste. See Potential inhibitory effect of lycopene on prostate cancer, How much in tomato paste? – Chef’s Resource, and Top 10 Foods Highest in Lycopene. Also:

Research studies focused on prostate health have established that consuming anywhere from  9 and 21 mg/day was associated with positive outcomes. [4] Other studies have also reported beneficial health effects and minimal side effects when supplementing with up to 45 mg of lycopene per day. 

According to Convert grams to ounces – Unit Converter, a six-ounce can of tomato paste yields 170 grams of Lycopene. (And boy did it take awhile to figure all that out.)

Re: Microplastics. See Scientists Discover Shocking Levels of Microplastics in Popular Tea Bags:

Plastic waste pollution poses a significant environmental challenge with serious implications for the health and well-being of future generations. A major source of human exposure to micro and nanoplastics (MNPLs) is food packaging, with ingestion and inhalation being the primary pathways of exposure… The tea bags analyzed were made from nylon-6, polypropylene, and cellulose.

And I thought they were made of paper. (Silly me.) Also, Microplastics in Bottled Water 10 Times Worse Than Thought | TIME, and Microplastics are everywhere: Is it possible to reduce our exposure? As to the boil-and-filter method, see Boiling tap water can remove 90 percent of microplastics, and There’s a Surprisingly Simple Way to Remove Microplastics.

Re: Glass bottles, see Glass recycling – Wikipedia. Also, Amid Recycling Rate Decline, Aluminum Beverage Can Remains Most Recycled Drinks Package.

The lower image is courtesy of Bodybuilding – Wikipedia.  Caption, “Arnold Schwarzenegger, one of the most notable figures in bodybuilding, in 1974.”  See also Arnold Schwarzenegger – Wikipedia.

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