Japanese beetles are welcome at my garden. I need a few every year to keep the milky spore active. I put it on my lawn many years ago and only see a handful every year since. Beetle traps are great for increasing Japanese beetle populations - they are attracted to the traps and many fall to the ground and lay their eggs. Japanese beetles also attract moles and skunks.
A nearby town had a mole problem - the moles were eating beetle grubs in lawns - homeowners used poison peanuts to get rid of the moles - boom, BIG skunk invasion.
I don't plow or till so random vegetables pop up and are welcomed into the garden. I actually encourage them. Radishes are allowed to go to seed - never have to plant them because they are everywhere crowding out the weeds, both spring and fall. Lettuce pops up and are transplanted into rows. Potatoes go wild. Cabbages are planted in the open spaces. Volunteers tend to produce earlier since they are already in the ground and bugs don't seem to find them as readily. Just ate the first squash of the year off a survivor vine. My gardens are quite a bit larger too.
LOL, he is a malignate narcissistic psychopath. Age isn't the issue. There are plenty of young psychopaths who mirror his beliefs. There are plenty of old people who are horrified with his "Idiocracy" shit-show regime.
Amish trick. Spray your tomatoes with milk. The calcium stops blossom end rot. Spraying milk is also effective against many tomato fungus.