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PERRIN LOVETT

~ Deo Vindice

PERRIN LOVETT

Tag Archives: health

The New Suburban Reality and Some Health Rankings

29 Wednesday Mar 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in News and Notes, Other Columns

≈ Comments Off on The New Suburban Reality and Some Health Rankings

Tags

America, health, society

It seems the myth of idyllic American suburbia, with white picket fences, carpools, and all that, is not all that. A myth perhaps…

Getting lost in suburbia is taking on a grim new meaning in the U.S.

The nation’s suburbs, once the wellspring of the American Dream, now has the highest rate of premature deaths from drug overdoses, according to a new findings from the County Health Rankings, a collaboration between the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute. Just a decade ago, America’s suburbs had the lowest rate of premature death from ODs.

The spike in drug-related deaths is contributing to what County Rankings’ Marjory Givens said is setting off “alarm bells” among public health experts: More younger Americans are dying prematurely, especially those aged 15 to 44. The drug overdose epidemic is the top cause of early death among 25- to 44-year-olds, an age many people in this group traditionally buy their first homes and embark on careers.

Yet for many adults, such achievements appear unobtainable, leading to what experts call “deaths of despair.”

Did your Realtor mention the deaths of despair? No. Can’t blame her.

This graph speaks volumes:

nimbus-image-1490835583408

The downtrodden of the inner cities still get most of the attention. Seems things may have changed – they did change. And, I’ll note that all areas seem to be getting worse.

So, to help you track your particular suburb, city, town, or farm country,

A LINK TO HEALTH RANKINGS FOR ALL U.S. COUNTIES

Florida, mapped from worst to first:

nimbus-image-1490835877748

Hillsborough, you’re No. 29.

Find out about your county and area. There’s some pretty good information linked to the maps. Go investigate.

*A tie-in to my early piece on the robot invasion: this will all be cured once the cyborgs take over. They don’t use drugs, they don’t get depressed, and they never get sick. Or die. Or care about taking your job. But anyway….

Eat for good health;

Exercise for depression;

Stay off the dope;

Shoot the next robot you see; and

Have a good evening!

Healthy Cities, Big and Small

08 Wednesday Mar 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

America, health

A Gallop-Healthways Survey reveals America’s most and least healthy places to live. Naples, FL, took the top spot, followed by Barnstable, MA – terrific places, both. One is a little chilly, the other balmy, both are near the sea.

2016-community-ranking-thumbnail-623418-edited

Healthways.

The study indexed 189 communities across the country based on a few key factors: purpose, social, financial, community and physical.

These rankings are, surprisingly, somewhat different than those I reported on last month.

Check the results and see where your town falls.

The American Healthcare Act of 2017

06 Monday Mar 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ Comments Off on The American Healthcare Act of 2017

Tags

American Health Care Act, Congress, GOP, government, health, law, legislation, ObamaCare

Whack-a-Bill, everyone’s least favorite carnival game is over. And people were really starting to wonder about the Obamacare repeal repeal and replace whatever…

Remember when Nancy Pelosi famously declared, “We have to pass the bill so that you can find out what’s in it?” She was, of course, referring to the Affordable Care Act, AKA Obamacare, and was justly skewered by “conservatives” at the time for the outlandish statement. Fast forward seven years, and now it’s the Republicans doing the exact same thing.

The GOP has chosen to conceal the text of what may become the replacement for Obamacare. Not only can you – someone the bill will most definitely affect – not read it. Members of the U.S. Senate are not even allowed to see what is contained in the legislation.

Senator Rand Paul, who is advocating for a complete repeal of the ACA, has made repeated attempts to view what he refers to as “Obamacare Lite,” but has still been unable to get his hands on a copy of the bill. The Kentucky senator has even gone so far as to wheel a copy machine to where he was told the bill was being housed. Paul, a Republican, was denied access.

The secrecy should be enough to alarm citizens across the U.S. and cause the public to demand to see what kind of health care reform may be about to be shoved down their throats. But what Senator Paul believes the bill contains is the most distressing part of this story.

“When we heard it was secret, we wanted to see it even more because if something is secret, you do worry that people are hiding things,” Paul said speaking to CNN.

Well pass around the cigars.The baby is here! THE FULL TEXT.

nimbus-image-1488849724483

I gave it a brief skim through. Much of this requires adjusting the existing law, 42 U.S.C. 300u–11. I don’t feel so ambitious tonight as to do a full reconcile. You’re on your own in that regard.

I see retroactive modification to the Community Health program, back to 2015. And another $422 Million spent.

They want to reroute Medicaid payments to the States. I heard some GOPers jibbering on the news about this: “Power out of Washington! Back to the States!” What about power to the people (and our money with us too)?

Mandates… Where are the mandates???

Oh heck …going to turn over analysis to Fox News. They are calling it a full replacement:

The sweeping legislation would repeal ObamaCare’s taxes along with the so-called individual and employer mandates – which imposed fines for not buying and offering insurance, respectively.

It also would repeal the Affordable Care Act’s subsidies, replacing them with tax credits for consumers.

The mandate and the fines were what most concerned me. Unconstitutional intrusion and theft (robbery, really), John Roberts’s “reasoning” aside.

House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Greg Walden, R-Ore., told Fox News they also “are not pulling the rug out from under people.” Rather, he said Republicans want to restore power to the states and control costs in Medicaid and elsewhere.

“It’ll amount to the biggest entitlement reform, probably in at least the last 20 years,” he said.

Good. Keep those reforms coming on a monthly basis at least. Aim for 1912!

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said …

Who the hell cares?

Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said the proposal “would cut and cap Medicaid, defund Planned Parenthood, and force Americans, particularly older Americans, to pay more out of pocket for their medical care all so insurance companies can pad their bottom line.”

Yeah, yeah. Killing babies, good; killing old folks, scare tactic… Do shut up, Chuck. He’s probably right about the insurance companies though; they pay Congress well to keep them in the black.

And from possibly the only respectable member of Congress:

However, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., said the bill “looks like ObamaCare Lite to me … It’s going to have to be better.”

Then, make the changes, Rand. That’s what committees and reconciliation are for. We may have to settle for ObamaCare Lite. Anything would be better than what we have now – a doomed system on imminent approach to bankruptcy and ruin. I’m not sure about Rand but I know his honorable father would, ultimately, like a return to a free enterprise-based system, one sans Medicare, Medicaid, and all other forms of government mismanagement and tyranny. That’s not going to happen … any time soon.

What has to happen is a reform. Is this it? Who knows. At least we have something to read and work with.

I’ve been hounding Congress to fix this mess since the summer of 2012. Finally, we’re getting somewhere. I’ll go ahead and take the credit. You can thank me tomorrow.

Here’s To Your Health (or Lack)

14 Tuesday Feb 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

America, culture, fitness, health

Richie Bernardo of WalletHub wrote up a substantive list of America’s healthiest cities (and least healthy too).

nimbus-image-1487122569840

(The bigger the circle, the worse things are).

The study measured: health care, food, fitness, and “green space”. San Francisco took the top spot; Detroit came in dead last. This is interesting. I was unaware anyone still lives in Detroit.

Click HERE for the full list.

The top ten:

1 San Francisco, CA
2 Salt Lake City, UT
3 Scottsdale, AZ
4 Seattle, WA
5 Portland, OR
6 Irvine, CA
7 Huntington Beach, CA
8 Honolulu, HI
9 Washington, DC
10 Santa Clarita, CA

(West much?)

The methodology seems sound. I’m sure anyone would want to rearrange a few towns. For instance, I can’t see anything healthy about D.C. except for spending and corruption levels. Still, if you work in and for Mordor, things must be pretty good.

I’ve been to many or most of these places and the findings seem to fit. I was surprised Asheville didn’t place. Maybe there was a population limit. Plenty of smaller cities are healthy too. Then again, where’s Charleston?

Anyway, for a very short while longer, I’m stuck between two of the ranked areas: #27 Tampa and #141 Augusta. Again, the rankings seem about right. Let’s us briefly examine those two for comparative value (if any):

Tampa, FL

nimbus-image-1487123132024

Tampa takes its worst hit on healthcare. I don’t go to the doctor but I know people who do. Tampa General seems like a pretty good hospital – for others… “Food” seems an average score; plenty of grocery stores and many decent restaurants. Fitness is appropriate at “10”. It’s a young, bustling city full of attractive people. They make an art out of taking care of themselves. The “green spaces” seems a little low – just a little. There are parks, even if they have a decidedly urban flare. And the countryside is not that far away.

All in all, it is a top 30 place, health-wise. There’s also an abundance of money, women, cigars, fast cars, women, beer, and other things to do.

Augusta, GA

nimbus-image-1487123178021

“Smaller, Southern Detroit” is 141 out of 150. A city that prides itself on hospitals (and other government spending) comes in at 140 for healthcare. Again, my personal experience here is lacking. The food score seems a little low; the eateries may be a little plain but there are plenty of them. “Green spaces” is also low; I hike everyday in one of many available parks. Some double as crime scenes but at least they’re there. I hate to say it, but 107 for fitness seems a little generous.

That may detract from the healthcare (many hospitals but overloaded with unhealthy patients) and the green spaces (what good are they if no one uses them). Being out of shape in Augusta seems to be the second most important character trait (just behind apathy and just ahead of gleefully willful ignorance). The Golden Ticket bus may have just parked on Washington Road but the locals are parked at Golden Corral.

The Masters aside, the most popular activity in town is mourning the pile of magic bricks recently toppled by a local drunk (it’s not the pillar that’s cursed, folks). There’s a geological reason for much of this lowness. Still, thank God for Detroit.

**

The article also comes complete with “best vs. worst” ranking in several in-depth categories and some expert opinions about something. In fairness, I did not consult the experts. You might.

Check and see where your city stands (or lies).

If your town is out of sync with you, or visa versa, consider a move.

The Not So Big Show

24 Tuesday Jan 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

exercise, fat, fitness, health, weight loss

One of my themes here is fitness. When I first kicked off in 2012 I was a large, oozy blob. By the time I reinvigorated things in 2013 I was down 40 or 50 pounds. It’s closer to 80 now, permanent, and I’ve never felt better.

Someone else is making big changes too. Paul White (a.k.a. The Big Show) of WWE(F) fame has recently shed 70 pounds. And he looks great.

cpxtemavyaeygal

@BigShow / Twitter.

I haven’t watched raslin lately but I do recall when White debuted. He was around 500 pounds. Now, still seven feet tall, he’s under 400. You can bet he’s more dangerous than ever now. And he feel’s better for it.

Congratulations, Big Show!

Now, after you watch the next match, go to the gym.

 

Patient Freedom From Obamacare?

22 Sunday Jan 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Donald Trump, government, health, ObamaCare, taxes, theft

That’s what they may call it, the Patients’ Freedom Act of 2017. Or something like that.

Happy halftime from the AFC Championship game. What a great game and what a great performance, earlier, by Atlanta.

And this could be a happy day for long-suffering taxpayers in America. The details on the PFA17 are sketchy but President Trump’s first executive order may take the gun-to-your-head teeth out of Obama’s miserably failed tax collection plan, aka Obamacare.

The Trump administration may no longer enforce a rule requiring individual Americans to carry health insurance or pay a penalty if they do not, a senior White House official said on Sunday Speaking on ABC’s “This Week” program, Kellyanne Conway, counselor to the president, said President Donald Trump “may stop enforcing the individual mandate.”

Separately, on CBS’ “Face the Nation” show, she reiterated Republican promises that no one would lose their health insurance under Obamacare while a replacement is being developed.

“For the 20 million who rely upon the Affordable Care Act in some form, they will not be without coverage during this transition time,” she said.

On Friday Trump signed an executive order concerning the 2010 healthcare law, urging U.S. agencies to “waive, defer, grant exemptions from, or delay the implementation” of provisions deemed to impose fiscal burdens on states, companies or individuals.

Healthcare experts had speculated that Trump could expand exemptions from the individual mandate.

This is fantastic news for any healthy person who has the crazy idea that their money is actually their money. I tried to find the Order. Here’s what they have out so far:

nimbus-image-1485133334203

Come on, POTUS Trump. Don’t leave us hanging. And don’t keep us paying.

Details, again, are a little short. Hopefully so to will be the duration of this horrible law. Developing…

 

 

A Few Simple Tips for a Healthier 2017

17 Tuesday Jan 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

2017, exercise, fitness, health, new you

I never figured myself for a health guru, especially back when I was a fat 255 lbs. Yet, today, I get asked all the time: what I do; how I do it; what works; what I recommend, etc. I like to be helpful, so here are some answers.

This week finds me four workouts into the year. I took off about 3.5 weeks – off just before Christmas through New Years by design, the rest by happenstance. The break was needed and worked wonders. Now I’ve hit the gym Saturday, Sunday, Monday, and today – a bit sore but it’s a good sore. Great things…

Here’s a few things you can do (not going overly into details, sorry):

In General

Sleep more and better. I have always struggled with the “better” part myself.

Breath better, slower and fuller.

Drink more water.

Stretch – before a workout, after a workout and, especially when you think you need it.

Stop worrying.

Stop associating with negative people, things, places, and habits.

Remember that “health” carries over to all facets of life. It’s not just pumping iron and eating granola. Think your day job is killing you? It might be. Prepare to change everything you have to.

Set a regular schedule. Decide on the kind of fitness or health you want and work towards it.

Cut out useless or damaging activities (i.e. TV).

Take it easy, pace yourself.

Don’t take it too easy.

If you have a legitimate, pre-existing condition, see a health professional before making any major changes. They’ll still recommend changes, just the right ones. If you’re a lazy slob, prepare to stop making excuses.

Exercises

Assess your fitness state and level. There are calculators for this. If in doubt, consult a doctor or a trainer.

Find a gym, home gym, park, or other place where you enjoy working out. Then do it.

Lift weights – no less than thrice per week, no more than five times per week (unless you become an athlete training for something – could happen).

Regulate your weight schedule.

Mix it up: everything works, nothing works for long. Change as needed.

Work in the cardio. I box, walk, hike, and do a kind of stumbling run.

Mix up the cardio too. Avoid boredom. Challenge yourself.

Find a way, almost any way, to make the exercise fun. Most times, it will be that in and of itself. Or it should be.

Monitor your progress. Make adjustments as needed. Set goals.

Rest when you need to – but not for too long. Rest can easily turn into idle sloth. This (and boredom) is why people give up on resolutions between right now and February.

If in pain, take a pill. Try to do without medications as much as you can. The body heals well all on its own.

Diet

Drink more water. I say this twice for a reason. More water, less other fluids.

2,000 calories per day – that’s the “average”. Use a calculator to tweak your intake as everyone is different. Count them daily.

Eat for fuel, not for feel.

Kill the: white flour, white sugar, most other sugar, starchy carbs, bread, “bad” fats, processed foods, fast food, and junk food. Just stop. This, by itself, will work wonders.

No: soft drinks, energy drinks (see below), cookies, cake, ice cream, etc. Stop indulging the sugar cravings and they will go away. Treat yourself every once in a while.

Lay off the alcohol. I say “lay off” not “quit”.

Eat a healthy amount of healthy fat. Fat is energy, it does not necessarily turn into body fat. Sugar and starch do.

Eat more fiber.

Eat more protein.

There are calculators for all this eating.

Eat more fruits and green veggies as part of a balanced diet.

Consider a vitamin or other health supplement. There are many and with many claims. Do your research.

Drink more water. Seriously, this and the sleep might be the most important part of the “program”.

If you need a “stimulant”, look no further than plain, old, black coffee.

If you think you need hormone replacement or HGH or something, you might. Consult a GOOD doctor before trying any of this stuff. I’m neither for nor against any of it, per se.

scan0013-edited

Slim it, trim it, join the yachting set, hug girls.

There you go. These things are so simple they practically explain themselves. It’s the starting and sticking with it that’s a little hard. Make it a month or so and you’ll be on autopilot. Fall off? You might. Then, just start again. Don’t give up and don’t give in.

Happy, healthy 2017!

The End of Obamacare?

16 Monday Jan 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ Comments Off on The End of Obamacare?

Tags

Congress, Donald Trump, fraud, government, health, insurance, medical care, ObamaCare

There’s no doubt the ACA is finished. It’s bankrupt; it doesn’t work; its killing coverage; the coverage afforded is basically unusable; doctor’s are fleeing; insurance companies are abandoning entire states; and, of course, it’s found nowhere in the Constitution outside the overactive imagination of John Roberts (not that that one matters). The question is how will it go out. And what will take it’s place?

President-elect Trump dropped some hints as to his coming answers:

President-elect Donald Trump said in a weekend interview that he is nearing completion of a plan to replace President Obama’s signature health-care law with the goal of “insurance for everybody,” while also vowing to force drug companies to negotiate directly with the government on prices in Medicare and Medicaid.

Trump declined to reveal specifics in the telephone interview late Saturday with The Washington Post, but any proposals from the incoming president would almost certainly dominate the Republican effort to overhaul federal health policy as he prepares to work with his party’s congressional majorities.

Trump’s plan is likely to face questions from the right, after years of GOP opposition to further expansion of government involvement in the health-care system, and from those on the left, who see his ideas as disruptive to changes brought by the Affordable Care Act that have extended coverage to tens of millions of Americans.

In addition to his replacement plan for the ACA, also known as Obamacare, Trump said he will target pharmaceutical companies over drug prices.

“They’re politically protected, but not anymore,” he said of pharmaceutical companies.

One wonders how “insurance for everybody” will be paid for. Trump is likely to face a greater fight from his own party than from the opposition. The Democrats should technically be okay so long as continued coverage for the “poor” is promised (no-one cares about delivery, it’s the thought that counts in D.C.). And the GOP has murmured about changing the law but keeping those dreadful taxes – even as they contemplate mind-blowing debt increases in the near years to come.

obamacarebattlemgn

NBC News.

Another huge problem will be the insurance industry and the medical community. They will not go away quietly. And they will join forces with the big-pharma racket. Nothing about repealing or replacing this monster will be easy. But change has to come. Barring massive, massive subsidies, the program as is, is finished.

Fred Reed recently mused on the fact that the much-maligned, socialist single-payer system found in some other countries is preferable to what we have now. And he’s right. Single-payer would cost less overall and would likely deliver much better results. But, recall that delivery doesn’t matter in D.C. Due to the stigma, the potential loss of control and profits for the insurance cabal, etc., and the lingering collective remembrance of freedom, socialized medicine is not going to happen in America. No time soon, at least.

The Austrian, the anarchist, and the capitalist in me fully believes that a completely unregulated, free-market system is by far the best alternative. It’s one we used to have and is still found in a few small places around the world. It worked – too well for the government and their corporate handlers. It will never return.

So “free” medicine, the best solution, and socialized medicine, a distant second-best, are off the table. That leaves things in between them and what we have now. And what we have now is the worst possible in the developed world. It’s really little better than no care at all in many cases. In some cases, it’s actually worse.

What we’re probably going to end up with is a compromise. Something dead in the middle that will last a few years or decades and then need another massive overhaul. I wish Trump (and all of us) well but I remain optimistically pessimistic.

As is, I’ll try to stay healthy and avoid any contact with any medical system. That’s what I recommend for everybody.

80% And Closing (Not Good)

28 Wednesday Dec 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

≈ Comments Off on 80% And Closing (Not Good)

Tags

fat, fitness, health, obesity, UK, US

The Daily Mail reports that now 80% of middle-aged Britons are either overweight or obese. I am confident this reflects on my side of the pond as well.

Britons are so inactive that they do not need nearly as many calories as their parents’ generation, researchers claim. Guidelines suggest an average man requires 2,500 calories a day while an average woman should aim for 2,000.

But these were drawn up around the First World War when adults walked to work and visited friends in person rather than phoning or texting.

Britons are so inactive that they do not need nearly as many calories as their parents¿ generation, researchers claim

Researchers from the London School of Economics who analysed 30 years of data say the modern-day calorie requirements should be slashed.

Dr Joan Costa-Font, whose study is published in the journal Food Policy, said: ‘Typically, life in the 21st century might mean a commute into a desk-based occupation, and three or four meals a day, leading to many people consuming more calories than their lifestyles require.

‘We still eat like our parents did, or worse, but we don’t move around nearly as much as they did. People no longer have to visit each other to hold a face-to-face conversation, they can simply Skype. We jump in the car or the bus or the Tube rather than walking.
‘As lifestyles have slowed down and become more sedate, people haven’t amended their calorie intake accordingly. We should all eat less.

‘The amount of food we eat compared with energy expenditure is simply too much. If people were as active as they were 30 years ago then recommended daily allowances of calories would be fine. It’s very hard to change how you eat from how your parents told you to eat, but we should all eat less today.

I occasionally track various obesity numbers across various demographics. The U.S. in general is north of 70% overweight. 80% is the next natural measure. I once predicted that we are moving towards a virtual 100% score. Four-fifths of the way there, baby.

woman-obesity-chart

And I do not want that prediction to become accurate. Let’s us, the U.S., the U.K. and everyone else, use 2017 to reverse the curse. It can be done! Starting very soon I’m going to tell you how. It ain’t easy but it is also not that hard. You’ll thank me.

Top Ten Disadvantages Of Fitness

20 Sunday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

≈ Comments Off on Top Ten Disadvantages Of Fitness

Tags

exercise, fitness, health

Another of my favorite sub-topics here is fitness. The site first really came into being on the heels of my great weight loss of 2012-2013. I frequently tout the advantages of getting in shape and staying in shape. However there are drawbacks.

Here I have tried my best to explain some of those healthy health-related problems. The following are both comical and serious. They are based on my own observations over the past four years. Here goes:

One. Fatophobia.

Once upon a time I was the epitome of the jolly overweight American. I thought to myself, then, that I wore it well. I didn’t. Others don’t either. When you’ve been there and come back, these things are very noticeable.

Two. Reverse fatigue.

Millions of Americans report chronic fatigue syndrome. This illness is real. And it’s curable. It’s caused by inactivity. Strangely, working out – over doing it – leads to some of the same symptoms. However, these are largely self-curing. It is something to beware of. Listen to your body.

Three. Rotating injuries.

This is part age-related and part over doing things. Curls on Monday lead to sore biceps on Tuesday, just in time for benching. That means a sore chest on Wednesday (with lingering arm issues too), just in time for breaking the back. The really sad thing is that one comes to enjoy it all.

Four. Beat up hands.

I lift and box. Both sides of my hands are constantly smashed up. At least there’s symmetry.

Five. Constant advice seeking.

Over a year or two you go from “Wow, You’re losing weight!” to “Hey, are you sick?” to “Can you give me some pointers?” I’m always happy to help. This is only irritating when I realize I really need to get my fitness book out. Demand is obviously there.

Six. No eating out.

Most restaurant food is garbage. Thus I almost never eat out anymore. And I don’t miss it. Until I do. Something about a double bacon cheeseburger. Gnome-sayin?

Seven. Getting hit on.

Yes, sweetie, I have guns.

You don’t have to touch them. (But it’s okay if you do.) I’m a crazy magnet so this gets complicated. If you shape up, get a stick.

Eight. Clothes don’t fit.

Now we come to the serious problems. I lost and rearranged 80 pounds. I lost about a foot off of my waist. I now have three outfits that fit properly and I hate shopping. This is a plus if you learn to embrace minimalism.

Nine. Can’t handle the booze.

Gone forever are the days of killing a bottle of Bowmore to warm up for a night of drinking. I have nothing at all against alcohol yet I find myself going weeks and even months without it. Two beers and done these days. And I really don’t miss it at all. Scotch and beer snobbery greatly contributed to the former girth. Maybe it’s not really a drawback.

Ten. Intolerance to cold.

This is by far the worst. Like a blubber-coated walrus, I used to happily go out in the snow in shorts. I have skied in a t-shirt. Now, when it drops into the sixties I feel compelled to sweater up. My hands hurt. This makes winter outdoor blogging problematic. On the plus side, the 100 degree days aren’t quiet as bad.

coldhand

Chris Bray.

Yet and still, all of these issues beat sluggishness, breathlessness, and diabetes. It’s like a Nick Kershaw song come true – the grass really is (a little) greener over here. Join us. Bring gloves…

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Prepper Post News Podcast by Freedom Prepper (sadly concluded, but still archived!)

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