Author: Daniel Keem
-
Eyewitness Testimony Can Be Deeply Flawed
Eyewitness testimony is among the most persuasive evidence in court — and one of the least reliable. Decades of research has documented why.
-
The Dream Home Concept Can Be Misleading
The ‘dream home’ freezes your finances and your geography. The houses people are happiest in are usually flexible enough to handle a life that changes.
-
Rest Days Are More Important Than You Think
Adaptation happens during recovery, not training. Most fitness plateaus are rest deficits, not effort problems. Here’s why rest is the workout.
-
Your Data Is Already Out There
By the time you start protecting your privacy, the major data brokers already have your file. Here’s what’s already exposed and what you can still control.
-
The Dream Home” Concept Can Be Misleading
When you hear the idea that the dream home” concept can be misleading, it's easy to have a strong reaction. The phrase alone can evoke curiosity, skepticism, or frustration. But whether it's a critique of modern life or a warning about hidden risks, the underlying message deserves a closer look. In a world where dream…
-
Warranties Don’t Cover What You Expect
Warranties promise peace of mind but exclude most of what actually breaks. Reading the limitations changes how you think about every product purchase.
-
The long-term care insurance market collapsed and we’re not talking about it
Long-term care insurance was supposed to protect aging Americans from catastrophic costs. The market has quietly collapsed, leaving millions exposed.
-
The Wellness Industry Thrives on Confusion
The wellness industry’s $4 trillion success rests on vague claims, undefined terms, and the inability of consumers to verify anything. That’s by design.
-
Planned Obsolescence Is Real
Planned obsolescence isn’t a conspiracy theory — it’s a documented business strategy with internal memos, court filings, and industry papers proving it.
-
Verbal Skills Can Prevent Physical Conflict
Most physical fights have a verbal buildup. Knowing how to de-escalate during that window resolves more confrontations than any martial art.