Author: Daniel Keem
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Training a Bull Terrier: Why Patience and Consistency Matter More Than Force
Bull Terriers are smart, stubborn, and famously independent. Force-based training backfires. Here’s why patience and consistency win every time.
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Why lenders want you to succeed (at first)
Lenders aren’t villains, but their incentives shift over the life of a loan. Understanding when their interests align with yours and when they diverge.
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People who make a living as professional mourners
Hired mourners are an old profession with a surprisingly active modern market. A look at where professional funeral attendees still operate and why.
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Sales events can be misleading
Black Friday, anniversary sales, and limited-time offers use predictable psychological tactics. Here’s how to tell a real discount from a manufactured one.
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Step counts are an oversimplified metric
The 10,000 steps target was a 1960s marketing slogan, not a research-backed goal. Here’s what the actual evidence says about daily steps and health.
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LLCs are over-recommended by lawyers who profit from filing them
Forming an LLC is the default advice for any new business, but many sole proprietors don’t need one. Here’s the conflict of interest behind the recommendation.
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Julie K. Brown and the Miami Herald’s perversion of justice investigation
How Julie K. Brown’s three-part Miami Herald series resurrected the Epstein case after a decade and forced federal action where prosecutors had stalled.
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The challenge of overturning convictions
Most wrongful conviction efforts fail not because the defendant is guilty but because of procedural rules designed to make reversal nearly impossible.