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Month: July 2025

Could NAD+ Help Pres. Trump’s CVI Diagnosis?

Is optimization the key to managing Chronic Venous Insufficiency?

On July 17, 2025, the White House announced that President Trump had been diagnosed with chronic venous insufficiency (CVI), which was causing swelling in his lower legs and feet. My first thought was, Ouch. Trump’s a big guy at 6’ 3” and easily 240 lbs. (if not 280), and putting that weight on swollen feet can’t be fun. To make matters worse, he puts in long days and even if he’s not on his feet the whole time, he has little opportunity to elevate his feet, which is important to manage the condition. And as I’ve often been told, swollen feet are sometimes an indicator of a heart condition, and the last thing we want is a Commander-in-Chief with a bum ticker.

Heart & Arteries

My second thought was, “Gee, this sounds familiar.” Since my early 50s, I’ve been bothered with swelling in my feet and lower legs, especially after flying in an airplane. I’ve had spidery veins in my ankles since my 40s. In my young adult days, a three-to-five mile run was a staple of my fitness regimen. But since my mid-50s I haven’t done any running; a quarter mile on pavement will cause my feet to balloon. (I had an acupuncturist who suggested eating pearl barley when my feet swell, and that’s generally helpful.)  

I’ve also developed painful neuropathy in my legs, which has dampened some of my activities. Since 2012, I’ve been an avid ballroom dancer, but the pain has sucked much of the joy out of that. Even gardening, which requires a fair amount of crouching and kneeling, was producing terrible pain in my swollen legs.

However, in the last couple of years, I’ve gotten a great degree of relief from the swelling and neuropathy, relief that I attribute to NAD+ optimization. If you’ve read my other columns on the subject, you know that the supplement I take, Vitality Boost from Jinfiniti, has helped me turn around a plethora of symptoms related to age and metabolic deficiencies. Before I was taking Vitality Boost, I slept badly because of cramping in my legs and my first few steps every morning were especially trying.

Today, I’m doing much better. Not only don’t my feet swell up anymore (and I rarely have to boil any barley), and I don’t get night cramps anymore, but the neuropathy is subsiding. That’s a symptom we’re told will only get worse with age. Yet mine is improving, along with other symptoms like fatigue, brain fog, allergies, etc. In fact, my issues with inflammation, the source of so much age-related pain, have diminished to the point where I no longer suffer from shoulder impingement, and am back to lifting weights at the gym.

So, I wondered if NAD+ optimization might also help President Trump and other folks suffering with chronic venous insufficiency. I contact Dr. Jin-Xiong She, the eminent microbiologist behind Vitality Boost and he emphatically told me, “Yes!”

What is chronic venous insufficiency or CVI?

Chronic venous insufficiency occurs when the veins in the legs struggle to return blood to the heart, often due to damaged or weakened valves. This leads to blood pooling in the lower extremities, causing symptoms such as swelling, aching, cramping, or skin discoloration. While generally regarded as a benign condition, particularly prevalent in individuals over 70, CVI warrants a closer look. In severe cases, it can result in leg ulcers or increased risk of complications like deep vein thrombosis (DVT). According to the Cleveland Clinic, CVI affects approximately 1 in 20 adults, with risk factors including advanced age, obesity, prolonged sitting or standing, and a history of blood clots.

President Trump’s physician, Dr. Barbabella stated that no evidence of DVT, arterial disease, heart failure, or systemic illness was found. All lab results were within normal limits and an echocardiogram confirmed normal cardiac function.

Orion at White House for Made in America Product Showcase (NHQ201807230018)

Treatment for CVI typically focuses on symptom management and preventing progression. Conservative measures include wearing medical-grade compression socks to aid blood flow, elevating the legs for 30 minutes multiple times daily, and engaging in regular exercise like walking to strengthen leg muscles. Weight management is also critical, as excess weight exacerbates venous pressure. In more severe cases, treatments like sclerotherapy (injecting a solution to collapse affected veins) or laser therapy may be used to reroute blood through healthier veins. The White House did not disclose a specific treatment plan for the president.

President Trump’s CVI diagnosis underscores the importance of proactive health management in aging leaders, something that was not a priority for the last White House.

Can NAD+ optimization alleviate and/or eliminate CVI?

According to Dr. She, NAD+ can definitely help President Trump’s condition on multiple fronts:

  • Help repair damage and leaks in the veins
  • Help manage weight by boosting metabolism
  • Reduce inflammation by combatting free radicals that produce oxidative stress.

Dr. She said he would also add a Turmeric+ product, which can help clear blood clots. 

Now’s the time to optimize your NAD+

If you are struggling with similar symptoms, you should certainly consult a physician to be on the safe side. But don’t settle for prescriptions that only mask the symptoms and don’t treat the underlying factors. I remember my mother regularly took prescription diuretics for swelling in her hands and feet, but never got any advice from her doctor on diet, nutrition, or lifestyle adjustments. She became dependent on those meds to address her frequent flareups, Fortunately, we know much more today about what is happening on a cellular level to cause these types of symptoms.

NAD+ is a natural compound that is essential for about 500 cellular functions. If you are deficient in NAD+, you’re going to have issues with a sluggish metabolism, insulin resistance, depleted energy, mental fog, and on and on. Optimizing your NAD+ can reverse those trends and restore you to vibrant good health. It’s well worth investigating.

Great news: Get started with NAD for 10 percent off!

Vitality Boost from Jinfiniti Precision Medicine

You can get started with Vitality Boost for 10 percent off the standard price by using my offer code KevinRush10 at checkout. Just follow this linkJinfiniti!

Disclaimer: The column may contain affiliate links, which help support the website. When you clink on an affiliate link and make a purchase, the website receives a small commission at no additional charge to you. Thank you for your support.

Did James Gunn Tell 81M Americans to Skip Superman?

The liberal dog whistle hints film will be toxic for flag-waving patriots

Days before the most anticipated movie of the summer opens, its director may just have tanked the box office. In a July 4, 2025, interview with The Sunday Times, director Gunn said, “Superman is the story of America. An immigrant that came from other places and populated the country, but for me, it is mostly a story that says basic human kindness is a value and is something we have lost.” This might be an innocuous statement by the foaming-at-the-mouth, MAGA-hating standards of Hollywood. But placed in context of the Trump administration’s aggressive repatriation of criminal illegal aliens, it seems to echo the same, tired liberal line that enabled a border crisis that has created an internal, national security crisis. It throws shade on those Americans who are tired of headlines replete with illegal immigrant violence, which has ruined the lives of so many of our fellow citizens. In true CNN form, Gunn implies that if you care more about Laken Riley than you do her murderer, Jose Antonio Ibarra, you’re a xenophobic, racist bigot, who has lost the value of basic human kindness.

In tooting his liberal dog whistle, Gunn offends more than half the nation. He also reveals that he gets America totally wrong. (What liberal doesn’t?) But most importantly for DC’s upcoming film release, the director tabbed with rebooting the Superman franchise has telegraphed that he hasn’t a clue about the iconic comic book hero. We’ll take these points separately, and as always, America first.

Those Americans who support the aggressive repatriation of illegal aliens do not hold this stance due to bigotry, hatred, xenophobia, white nationalism, or any of the common calumnies the main stream media regularly recycles. We believe that if a nation is to exist, it needs borders and laws. Both have been violated, and we must correct that situation. We believe in fairness, particularly towards those hoping to immigrate via the legal process. We believe in security, which means being free from criminal gangs and terrorist sleeper cells. And we believe that exceptions prove the rule, they do not obliterate the rules. Therefore, if you cite an illegal alien who is otherwise a solid individual, we’ll concede he’s not likely to bomb a skyscraper. However, it’s madness to think that his reluctance to bomb a skyscraper justifies his continued existence in this country. He broke the law; he’s got to go. Period.

Gunn implies that since immigrants “came from other places and populated the country,” the country owes a debt to all foreigners everywhere, which can only be repaid by granting unfettered access. He associates this with kindness, but by every practical metric, it’s madness. This reminds us of an important point Vice President J.D. Vance made recently about the Christian duty to love our neighbors. Liberals regularly assert that putting up border fences to keep out Third World migrants is a failure to follow that great commandment. But this view, if implemented, would bring about absurd, unworkable, and ultimately cruel consequences. Vance was correct to site St. Thomas Aquinas on the “right order” of our duty to love. We must love our family first, then our country, then the outside world. The notion that parents struggling to put food on the table for their children should have an equal concern for the Tren de Aragua hitman recently released from the bowels of a Venezuelan prison is patently absurd. Yet, this is the ivory tower standard Gunn’s comments conjure: kindness uber alles. In the liberal mind, prioritization is discrimination, and that’s a no-no. But failing to prioritize is a recipe for anarchy.

Why can’t Hollywood get Superman right?

What Gunn seems to get wrong about Superman, Hollywood has gotten wrong before. Recall the Zack Snyder travesty entitled Man of Steel, where Superman was cast as an innocent immigrant, irrationally hated by the ugly, paranoid knuckle-draggers that make up America. His adopted father had warned young Clark against revealing who he was, because the peasants would come out with their pitchforks. Snyder’s Man of Steel was a migrant forced to live in the shadows, for fear of exposure and expulsion. This contemporary politicization of Superman was not only tedious and inartful, it betrayed the essence of Superman’s character, and the essence of the noble American immigrant. Gunn’s remarks lead us to believe he’s retreading the trail Snyder blazed.

Gunn says America has lost the value of human kindness. Therefore we cannot welcome the immigrant, Superman included. This belies the reality in America, wherein legal immigrants are regularly naturalized in moving public ceremonies. Naturalized citizens are welcomed into the fold, regardless of race, color, or creed. This fact is inconvenient for the liberal narrative, which seeks to conflate the illegal with the legal, as though there is no substantive difference. By the liberal measure, human kindness dictates that we treat the criminal and the law-abiding exactly the same. But, as is often said, those who will be kind to the cruel wind up being cruel to the kind.

To be clear, what liberal Hollywood (whether it’s Gunn or Snyder) gets wrong about Superman is their insistence that he’s an immigrant who makes the country better, full stop. While that much is true, it’s not the whole story. The whole story is one of reciprocity. We hear all the time about how immigrants make America better; but how often do we hear the reverse asserted? That American makes immigrants better people. America is a country that makes its residents better, because it gives them the freedom to pursue well-ordered lives within the framework of a just society.

In his essence, Superman is great because Superman is good. And Superman is good, at least in part, because of the influence America has had on him. Superman is good because he grew up on a farm in Kansas, working the soil to grow food for his family and the nation. Superman is good because his adoptive parents were salt-of-the-earth folks who gave him a loving upbringing and taught him the Golden Rule. We’re certain he read Matthew 20:26 in Sunday school (“Whoever wants to become great among you must serve the rest.”), marched in the Fourth of July parade, studied the self-evident truths of our great Declaration, and pledged allegiance with his hand over his heart. Superman is good because life in Smallville, Kansas, USA is good.

Try transplanting Superman anywhere else on the planet. What kind of a man does Kal-El become if he lands in the Soviet Union, Saudi Arabia, or Somalia? Is Superman great if he grows up in Gaza and is constantly fed propaganda about killing Jews? Is he great if he lands in Mao’s China and grows up reading the Little Red Book? No, Superman is great because of the formation America gave him, and that’s why he eagerly, generously, and patriotically gives back.

But when you hate America as passionately as liberal Hollywood does, you cannot admit of her greatness. You must prop up the lie that immigrants make America better irrespective of the country’s influence on them. You must show America in the worst light possible, so that Superman is only good because he lives as a being apart, undefiled by an oppressive country in need of a fundamental transformation.

Truth. Justice. Y’know, the thing.

As someone who grew up on Superman, I’m saddened that his legacy is in the hands of people who don’t understand or care about him. Who want to use him cynically to drive their own dubious agenda. But this has been a long time coming. When I was roughly 11, I bought a Superman comic which had replaced the familiar slogan of “truth, justice, and the American way,” with “truth, justice, and the Terran way.” The what now?

The Terran way seemed to suggest that there was a common mode in which all humans operated. But it was evocative of nothing. Was the USSR dedicated to “the Terran way?” What about Fidel Castro’s Cuba? Mao’s China? The American way might have been too idealistic and downright corny, but at least it was rooted in something. It was deeply rooted in the principles articulated in our founding documents. The Terran way was flotsam, woven from pixie dust, unicorn tears, and wishful thinking.

The reactions I’m seeing suggest that Gunn’s comments have dampened what was already tepid enthusiasm for the upcoming film. I was on the fence myself. Having already been brutally disappointed by Superman Returns and Man of Steel, I have no confidence that contemporary Hollywood can get Superman right. Not that they care. Film projects are no longer entertainment vehicles; they are delivery mechanisms for “the message.” James Gunn’s remarks reinforce in my mind that “the message” is his primary concern and telling a good Superman story finishes a very distant second.

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