Saturday, April 4, 2026

Gummies

Gummies are the next big thing, but are they really a good thing?

As you get older, you take a lot more pills, some prescription and some are supplements. Vitamins and such, for example.

The prices aren't cheap, at least at the retail store. Oftentimes, a small bottle of vitamins or supplements can cost $20 or more. If you shop online, you can find the cost a lot less, particularly if you buy in bulk.

Prices are all over the board, however. Some retailers are selling a small bottle of 100 vitamins for more than another retailer is selling a bottle of 500, with the same dosage and chemical content. You really have to look at the cost per pill when comparing these things. In most cases, Amazon shows this value, in other cases you have to get out your calculator.

But one thing is clear, vitamins and supplements presented as gummies are usually 5 to 10 times as expensive as pills. I'm not sure why we want our vitamins and other pills to be treated like candy. That only is it far more costly, it seems to me to be rather dangerous.

For example, I acquired from a friend of mine a large bottle of vitamin C gummies. I also got a large bottle of vitamin C pills which has a lot more servings for a lot less money. But what concerns me is that the vitamin C gummies taste like and look like candy, down to the sugar crystals dotting the outsides.  A child could easily confuse these with actual candy and would be tempted to eat the entire bottle. I'm not sure what the results would be other than a lifelong immunization from scurvy.

It just strikes me as odd that we put child-proof caps on everything these days, even things that you don't think a child would want to consume. I have a child-proof cap on my mouthwash, but nobody at their right mind wants to drink  mouthwash. I'm sure a child trying to drink it would spit it out shortly.

But pills? We make them intentionally enticing by making them look like and taste like candy. It makes no sense to me.

Marijuana gummies - which is what most people think of, when you say, "Gummies" in the first place - merely compounds the problem.  Little Suzie goes to visit Hippie Grandma and ends up passed out on the floor after eating a whole box full.  Since it takes nearly an hour for the effects to be felt, it isn't hard for a child to wolf down a handful without feeling initial effects.  As an adult, even a whole one of these makes me fall asleep, or more precisely, pass out.  I can't imagine what a handful would do to a kid.  Why aren't these provided as pills?  Why are they not in childproof packages? (Many times they are not!).

I recently ordered some multivitamins for "Men over 50," and the cost per bill was about 4 cents each. The same multivitamin in gummy form was 15 cents each, and some places wanted as much as 29 cents apiece. I'm not sure paying several times the cost of something in order to have it as candy is really a cost-effective thing.

Of course, many question the efficacy of many of these vitamins and supplements. Many nutritionists point out that if you have a balanced diet you probably don't need a multivitamin. And in some cases vitamins and supplements can actually be harmful to you. The vitamin supplement industry is a little shady to say the least.

Making these things look like candy it's just icing on the cake, so to speak.

Friday, April 3, 2026

Non Compos Mentis

I had to cheat on my cognitive test!

Another trip to Mayo, and I am not sure any of it is useful.  To recap, after spending over $100,000 of your taxpayer money, they found my organs are all in remarkably healthy condition - except my brain.  And there is nothing they can do about that, other than to prescribe medication.  So here we are.

They wanted to do cognitive testing, which took three hours to complete.  It is far more difficult than the "Montreal Protocol" shown above (which I sent to Mr. See during a break, as a joke).  They give you a string of numbers - like seven of them - and you have to read them back, in reverse.  I didn't think I would do well at that, but the trick for me was to read back the numbers first in original order, quickly (like it was one word) and then reverse the order.

I did well with arranging the bi-colored blocks into patterns, which sounds like child's play (and it was at first) but when they keep adding blocks and putting the pattern on the diagonal, it does get tricky.  I can see some "normal" people struggling with this.

But the interesting part was word listing.  "Give me all the words you can think of starting with the letter F, you have one minute!"  My mind went blank - possibly because it reminded me of the scene from Sense and Sensibility where they try to guess the name of Elinor's new boyfriend:

"His name begins with F. F? A promising letter. Foster? Forrest? Fotheringay? Featherty? - Fortescue? - Fondant?"

I sort of stalled after that.

The point of the test is to establish a starting point to measure my mental decline.  They can re-test a year or two from now and chart where I am falling behind.  Again, the purpose of this is somewhat ambiguous to me - I already know how far I have fallen.  What's the point of drawing a graph?

All that being said, I have no doubt I did better on the test than Trump did!

Thursday, April 2, 2026

New Scam: The "VIN Report" Scam

When someone demands you go to an unknown site, beware!

I got a late-night text from an Oregon phone number asking if the trailer we are selling is "still available."   They wanted to see it tomorrow - all the way from Oregon!  Two red flags right there.  The "Is the item still available?" is the other red flag.  The "item"?  ESL!

Anyway, I played along and the guy wanted something like the "AVR" report and gave a link to an unknown website that purportedly generates CarFax-like reports.  I did not click on it.  I searched online and (after bypassing Google AI) found several sites discussing the scam.  Google AI helpfully chimed on, saying the site link was trustworthy!  Google AI sucks.

Don't click on such links.  The "VIN Report" site is fake and they want $25 for a "VIN Report" and for some reason, the buyer will only accept this one type of report.  They basically steal your credit card number and whatever other information they can get.

Buying and selling a car or other big-ticket item by yourself can be stressful.  Con artists play on your fear (that it will never sell, because you overpriced it!) or your greed (that you are going to make a lot of money selling it to a guy who immediately agrees to pay asking price, sight unseen).  Or people think they are going to buy something for 1/10th its value.  So people fall for these traps.

It sounds like a lot of work to steal credit card numbers, but since the texts are automated, it isn't hard to set the hook initially, and the scammers are working dozens of cons at one time, and if one plays out, so much the better.

Of course, the big red flag for me is that, generally speaking, trailers don't have VIN reports, and indeed, Craigslist and eBay both point out that the VIN number has no data associated with it.  A Canadian VIN number, registered in the US, doubly so.  So when these Bozos contact me asking for a "VIN report" on a travel trailer, well, the game is up before they start.

Got another one this AM - again from Oregon (why?) wanting to see the trailer tomorrow.  When I asked them where they were located, they replied, "Jekyll Island)" including the half-parentheses they cut and pasted from the CL listing. Nice Try, I replied.

It is all part of the enshittification of the Internet.  Since it is a worldwide web and still largely anonymous, it is easy for those overseas (or even domestically) to start scams, often automated, with a yield rate of 1-2% at best.  But since you can send out texts to millions of people, the returns can be substantial.

Craigslist is pretty dead these days.  Around here, it is mostly rednecks selling broken trash. "Two rotted fenceposts - $20"  I kid you not.  I listed some items there (bike rack, roof rack, Yakima stuff) and got NO responses.  I tried Facebook Marketplace by re-enacting my old account (closed ages ago) and they let me put up ONE ad.  Then they suspended the account, I guess because it had been deleted previously.  They wanted an image of my driver's license, which I had sent before, and then a VIDEO of my face (so they can do a deepfake of me?) to restore the account.  I took a pass.

I listed the trailer on fiberglassrv.com and the Escape Trailer forum (both owned by the same online entity, I discovered).  But it is like advertising your BMW on a BMW forum.  Everybody on there already has one!  We paid $30,000 for the trailer, new (seven years ago), and people had theirs listed on the enthusiast sites for $40,000 to $50,000!  I mean, yea, inflation, but really?  You price yours realistically and you get shouted down because you are "destroying the resale value of their trailer!"

We ran into the same thing with my friend's C5 Corvette - the car no one buys, sells, or drives.  "It's worth more than that!  I'm not just giving it away!"  Your kids will, though.

The trailer is on eBay with a "buy it now" price of $30K and a starting bid of $15K and two bids so far.  I want  it sold, not sitting on my lawn while I mow around it for several seasons, like they do in Central New York.

This is not entirely by chance, either.  The car pricing guides (KBB, Edmunds, NADA, etc.) have changed or been sold and are now hard to use.  You go online to see what your car is worth and are bombarded with ads to sell you a new car.  Resale data is hard to find, if you can find it at all. And with all the scams and hassles of selling private party, companies like CARMAX and CARVANA make it sound appealing to just use their services instead.

Car dealers hate private party sales and no doubt would outlaw them if they could.  They kind of sorta already have.