Author: Daniel Keem
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Biohacking Supplements Promise More Than They Deliver
Biohacking supplements promise sharper cognition, longer life, and better mitochondria. The evidence is mostly preliminary, mostly mouse studies, and mostly hype.
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Why I keep more cash than every financial advisor says I should
Financial advisors hate excess cash. Real life rewards it. Here’s why holding more than the textbook recommends has paid off in ways spreadsheets miss.
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Why Some Cases Settle for Less Than Expected
Many legal cases settle below what plaintiffs believe they’re owed. Understanding why helps you avoid the same trap when it’s your turn to negotiate.
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Immune Boosting Supplements Are Misleading
Immune-boosting supplements are everywhere, but the immune system doesn’t work the way the marketing claims. Here’s what the science actually shows.
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Insurance-driven 50-minute sessions are bad medicine
The 50-minute therapy hour exists because insurance pays for it, not because it’s clinically optimal. The format quietly limits what therapy can do.
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The mortgage interest deduction is upper-middle-class welfare
The mortgage interest deduction is sold as help for homeowners. In reality, it disproportionately benefits high earners and inflates housing prices.
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Why More Testing Doesn’t Always Mean Better Care
Ordering more tests feels thorough, but it often produces false alarms, unnecessary procedures, and worse outcomes. Better care is targeted, not maximal.
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Why Legal Advice Early Can Change Everything
Most people call a lawyer too late. Early legal advice is cheaper, more strategic, and often the difference between a good outcome and a salvage job.