Anything inexpensive. Wiper blades usually crap out, at about 1 1/2 years, around Houston, no matter how expensive, inexpensive, top tier, or the cheapest.
I had a friend that used to leave some crappy wipers on all summer, then pull out his "good ones" when the rainy season began. But around here, we don't seem to have a rainy season anymore.
If you're an enthusiast, cleaning the windshield with a lime remover and using RainX will give you such a good result at highway speeds that you don't need your wipers.
The best cleaner of hard water deposits I've used was some name I can't recall, but which had a mild acid and abrasive. I think there are still products out there like that, but which use a citric acid these days.
I am trying the cheap route this time with a pair of Emuthsun off of Amazon. 3 months in and not a lot of rain but they seem to be doing pretty good. We'll see how they hold up compared to the Bosch's.
Don’t buy the cheapo Michelin’s at Costco. They started to screech after a month of use. They almost drove me batty. The caveat here is I was using them on a full size SUV. Maybe little shorties on a JL won’t be as annoying.
I've used and recommended the Bosch brand of windscreen wipers for years.
Curiously, when I installed a pair of new Envision blades on the Wrangler, their practical service life was comparably abbreviated. I've been careful to clean the glass of bugs almost daily, and wipe (i.e., refreshen) the blades with isopropyl alcohol periodically. Nonetheless, it's been less than a year now and I can see that the blades' performance isn't long for this world.
The same short lifespan occurred with the OEM wipers. I thought that going upmarket would give me a longer run of things. Not this time.
What's equally curious is that, with their third season approaching, the price-point Duralast winter wiper blades that were purchased at Autozone, and are in situ on the Jeep for several of our coldest and wettest months, continue to work as if they were new.
Don't use abrasives, acids, lime cleaners, etc.... Just use steel wool, #00 or better. Go against the grain on the outside of the windshield ONLY. it'll be as clean as new.