Author: Daniel Keem
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Why Consistency Matters More Than Severity
In personal injury cases, consistent symptoms documented over time outweigh dramatic peaks. Insurers and juries trust patterns more than they trust intensity.
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Age Can Be an Advantage in Some Careers
Tech startups worship youth, but plenty of careers reward experience, judgment, and accumulated network. Age isn’t only a liability — in many fields, it’s the asset.
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Forced arbitration clauses are how corporations escaped the legal system
Forced arbitration clauses, hidden in everyday contracts, have stripped consumers of jury trials and class actions. The shift happened with little public notice.
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The role of Alex Jones in mainstreaming 9/11 conspiracies
Alex Jones didn’t invent 9/11 conspiracy theories, but he played a documentable role in moving them from fringe forums into broader media consciousness.
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Younger People Fall for Scams Too
The stereotype that scams target only the elderly is wrong. Younger adults lose money to fraud at similar rates, often through different scam types and channels.
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Online degrees are still treated as second-class and that’s snobbery
Despite improved quality and accreditation, online degrees still carry stigma in hiring. The bias survives because credentialing has always been about signaling, not learning.
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Trust Is Often Misplaced
Most fraud and abuse comes from people we already trust, not strangers. Recognizing the patterns of misplaced trust is more useful than vague warnings about scammers.
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Tablets Are Unnecessary for Most People
Tablets occupy an awkward middle ground between phones and laptops. For most users, they’re a redundant purchase that gets used twice and then sits in a drawer.
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Staying Too Long Can Hurt Your Market Value
Loyalty to one employer used to be rewarded. Now it often means stagnant pay, narrow skills, and a lower market value than peers who moved every few years.