Yeah, we know. Donald Trump and Mortimer Snerd are running the government, what’s there to cheer about? Well, for one thing, the steamroller seems to be getting stuck in the mud. Dumbstruck GOP voters are taking a look around and discovering the barrage of new government policies are negatively affecting them. There’s nothing more effective than getting your own pocket picked to make you aware of bagsnatchers. People are showing up at town hall meetings to haze Republican milquetoast legislators and let them know the sky is falling. The verbiage has gotten so mean that most of the pols are prohibiting taping of the meetings or not showing up at all. Heck, even low-life senators and representatives don’t like being called skunks on the six o’clock news.
Mortimer doesn’t get it. Totally void of compassion for the armies of government workers he’s disenfranchised, he shows up on stage with a roaring chain saw, promising more devastation. Bodies are falling all over Washington like iguanas from trees on a cold day in Boca. The unfairness of it all grips even cold Republican hearts. “It’s one thing to toss out the Spics but the other day they canned Smokey the Bear!” If you’re planning to overnight at Yellowstone this summer, be prepared to change your own sheets and bring a gas mask to the public toilets. And speaking of falling objects, Tesla sales have fallen through the floor in the U.S. and Europe, down 75% in Spain, 63% in France and 60% in Germany, mainly due to the behavior of its CEO. So there’s some good news.
Here’s more:
Aloha To Anthracite
Hawaii has replaced the state’s last coal plant with a giant battery. Yes, you can have a functional grid without fossil fuels, you just need a powerful battery system to absorb it from the grid. The Kapolei Energy System’s 185 megawatts of instantaneous discharge capacity match what the old coal plant could inject into the grid, and the batteries react far more quickly with a 250-millisecond response time. Instead of generating power, they absorb it from the grid---ideally when it’s flush with renewable generation---and deliver cheap, clean power back in the evening hours when it’s desperately needed.
Meanwhile, back in the jungle, nature’s best defenders, it’s trees, are making a comeback. Several studies have shown that reforestation substantially mitigates the effects of climate change, acting as a natural air conditioner. Because 15 hectares of eastern U.S. forests have been restored, they are helping keep the region cool in the face of rising temperatures everywhere. From forests to wetlands, many ecosystems are doing exceptional work in removing carbon emissions from the atmosphere. A new study at the University of Washington has discovered “cryptic wetlands”---so named because they are covered by forest canopy---which are difficult to access by aerial photography and may be far more prevalent and beneficial than previously realized.
Off the coast of Solomon’s Island, what was long thought to be a giant shipwreck area has turned out to be the world’s largest coral colony in the Pacific Ocean. The entirety of the colony measures out to 112 by 105 feet, making it larger than Earth’s biggest animal, the blue whale. The colony is so large it can be seen from space but has somehow been unrecognized, which has probably led to its excellent condition. In a recent study of coral restoration in Indonesia, scientists found that restoration efforts in artificially restored reefs can regrow the reefs as fast as naturally recurring reefs just four years after the initial transplantation. At the project site, “reef stars” are first affixed to the reef floor. These small, recycled metal scaffolds provide a foundation for the coral larvae to glom onto and begin building their hard bodies.
Oh, and those Murder Hornets you’ve been worried about? Forget it. They’ve been eradicated from the country. Well, except for those two in Washington. “Quick, Henry—the Flit!”
Doctor! Doctor! Give Me the News….
“One of the biggest breakthroughs in neurology this year will relate to the ongoing development of blood testing for the underlying causes of dementia and neurodegeneration, particularly Alzheimer’s Disease. The pace of progress is such that we are likely to see what we’ve learned soon be implemented.---Professor Paresh Malhotra, Division of Neurology at Imperial College London.
About 20 Alzheimer’s drugs are in late-stage clinical trials, thus the new year will bring results and potentially new treatments to regulators. Each one is a step closer to a future where treatments will slow the progression of the dreaded disease. Existing research into blood biomarkers, red flags for the early signs of Alzheimer’s, is hugely promising and is already revolutionizing clinical research.
More than two in five U.S. adults are obese, a number so prevalent that it needs to be acknowledged as more than a willpower problem. Factors like genetics, food access, poor sleep quality and chronic stress all contribute to the obesity epidemic, calling for new infrastructure to help end it. In 2024, the mainstream adoption of GLP-1 receptor agonists marked a turning point, with Medicare and other major payers beginning to cover these transformative therapies. For the first time in decades, U.S. obesity rates showed measurable improvement, bending the curve and sparking optimism for long-term public health.
Personalized cancer vaccines may be the wave of the future. Thousands of cancer patients in England will soon be able to access trials of a new vaccine treatment designed to prime the immune system to target cancer cells and reduce recurrence risk. These vaccines are also expected to produce fewer side effects than conventional chemotherapy. Over 200 patients from the UK, Germany, Belgium, Spain and Switzerland will receive up to 15 doses of the personalized vaccine, with the study expected to be complete by 2027.
Meanwhile, researchers in the U.S. have developed a test they say can identify 18 early-stage cancers without using the usual invasive and costly methods. Novelna’s test works by analyzing a patient’s blood protein. In a screening of 440 people already diagnosed with cancer, the test correctly identified 93% of stage 1 cancers in men and 84% in women.
England’s National Health Service is the first in the world to make use of a cancer treatment injection, which takes just seven minutes to administer rather than the current time of up to one hour by intravenous infusion. The drug Atezolizumab or Tecentriq treats cancers including lung and breast, and most patients in England will likely switch to the jab.
Fun Facts. Some Old, Some New.
1. Genomicists claim they can now sequence more than three billion base codes of your DNA with a simple mouth swab, but who’s counting? Known as genomic and epigenetic testing, the process reads you and your 21,000 genes like a book, scanning for early signs of disease (think of them as typos) to help doctors take a proactive approach and tailor treatments specifically for you.
2. If you’re terrified of needles, take hope. Jab-free vaccines and flu shots promise to take the pain out of checkups. British researchers have devised a way to deliver a live vaccine (dried in sugar) with a patch applied to the skin just like a sticker. Whoop-de-do for Doctor Who!
3. Is everyone in England brilliant? Introducing the iKnife, a smart scalpel developed by researchers at Imperial College London. It provides instant feedback to help surgeons distinguish between cancerous and healthy tissue surrounding tumors as they excise them from the body. The scalpel works by analyzing molecules of the smoke caused by heat generated in surgery, then signaling to physicians whether it’s cancer-free. Thus the iKnife cleverly eliminates the margin of error and makes surgery less invasive. The critter’s success rate is a nifty 100% in 91 tries.
4. Don’t burn that bra, girls! It might be one of those new ultrasophisticated tumor-tracking sports bras that can save your life. No kidding. First Warning Systems of Reno, Nevada, of all places, has created a piece of underwear containing software capable of measuring changes in body temperature associated with breast tissue abnormalities. In early trials, the smarty-bra sensed cancer with 92% accuracy for up to six years before a tumor became visible on a mammogram. Put that in your bong and smoke it.
5. Head ‘em up and move ‘em out! A company in our 51st state has created an exciting brain stimulator which could get paralyzed patients moving again. MyndTee of Mississauga, Ontario has come up with a jewel called MyndMove, a non-invasive device that uses electrical therapy to retrain the brain to restore voluntary movements, like reaching and grasping. After just eight weeks, patients noticed amazing improvements in their quality of life. The tool has caught the attention of the Canadian government which just invested a cool million to aid in its commercial development. O Canada, we stand on principle for thee!
6. We have some help for singer Al Green, who wants to know How Can You Mend a Broken Heart. An Ontario start-up (is there something in the water in Ontario) is empowering heart failure patients to never miss a beat. Nicoya Lifesciences has developed an app that tests vitals with a pinprick and a smartphone. After a drop of blood is squeezed into a special cartridge and inserted into a pocket-sized reader that attaches to a phone, the blood is analyzed and wirelessly shared with the patient’s health care team. Over six million North Americans have congestive heart failure but founder Ryan Denomme is confident of the tester’s success. “Our device could cut rehospitalization rates by up to 50% and death by 30%.” That’s not soggy ginergbread, folks.
7. There’s new hope for umpires everywhere. The first Bionic Eye is now approved for worldwide use after 20 years of research. Okay, it won’t help all arbiters but it’s dandy for anyone with retinitus pigmentosa, a degenerative disease which can lead to blindness. Argus II is a system of electrodes implanted in the retina, paired with glasses linked to a built-in video camera. The camera turns images into pulses, which the electrodes read as light patterns, allowing the brain to see movement and objects. Researchers are now working on camera-free alternatives with retinal implants that look like computer chips. Maybe there will soon be joy in Mudville.
8. No, it’s not Frankenstein—here comes Andrew Johnson, diagnosed with early-onset Parkinson’s Disease. Cyber AJ, as he’s called, has implanted electrodes in his head to control his tremors, and they work. The electrodes target wayward neurons and silence AJ’s shakes and tics, all with the simple flick of a button to trigger deep stimulation within his brain. How does it work? Special electrodes are connected to a stopwatch-sized unit hooked up to a pacemaker near the heart. Wish you’d though of it, right?
Not Dead Yet
You probably won’t believe this but when I bring up the subject of next May’s Grand Finale, some people cough and turn their heads, occasionally avert their eyes, fumble with their car keys or run out of words to say. I think they might be trying to tell me something. Something like “You’re 85 years old this November, Bill---think you might want to move the party up?” Well, I’m fairly insulted…not highly insulted, mind you, since most humans are strewn to the four winds before their odometers hit 80, but marginally miffed.
Many of you are willing to believe that Jesus was crucified by politically incorrect Romans, then rose from the dead to save the world. He was, in a sense, immortal. So why is it so difficult to acknowledge that Bill was crucified by a horrendous redneck driver in a headon collision, rose from the dead and is throwing a wingding for all his friends? It makes perfect sense to Will Thacker.
For doubters, my annual February assessment at CVI Heart Control, featuring Echocardiagrams, EKGs and advanced Ouija Board techniques assures us that all is well. “You’re perfect!” avers cardiologist Daniel Van Roy, which means I am exactly where I was last year in my staredown with the Grim Reaper. A CT scan at the time of the accident found no lurking dangers, though my kidneys “could be better.” So could yours. I have wisely avoided the perils of having The 70-Year-Old Hitch by having my compromised prostate removed. If it helps, I have two sisters, one 82, the other 74 and both are still walking the beat. What else ya got? Alcohol issues? No, thanks. Drug problems? My wife is a Puritan except where coffee is concerned. Failing memory? Say what?
Only 14 months to glory. I plan to be there with bells on and so should you. It’s the last train to Clarksville, you don’t want to miss it. One more love-in, one more chance to kiss Mary Kay on the schnoz and goose Michael Davis. Succeeding generations will speak of it in reverent tones, struck dumb by its magnificence. It’s The Grand Finale. It’s coming and nothing can stop it, neither old age nor common decency nor even Elon. Be there or forever hold your peace. Or is it peas?
That’s all, folks…