Author: Daniel Keem
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Some treatments are based on limited evidence
Many widely used medical treatments rest on weaker evidence than patients assume. Here’s how to ask better questions about what’s been proven and what hasn’t.
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Why late payments aren’t always financially devastating
A single late payment won’t ruin your finances. Here’s what it actually costs, when it matters most, and how to recover faster than the panic suggests.
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Buyer protections: how to shop gem shows safely
Gem shows mix legitimate dealers with sophisticated scammers. Here’s how to inspect stones, structure payments, and recover money when something goes wrong.
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The time a beer flood killed people in London
In 1814, a vat at a London brewery burst and sent over 320,000 gallons of porter through a slum. Eight people died. The legal response is its own story.
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Architects & Engineers for 9/11 Truth: who they are and what they argue
Architects & Engineers for 9/11 Truth claims controlled demolition felled the towers. Here’s who the group is, what they argue, and what mainstream engineers say.
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Trauma is the most overused word of the decade
Calling everything trauma flattens real suffering and inflates ordinary discomfort. Here’s how the word lost meaning, and why precision matters for healing.
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The street homelessness crisis is a mental health policy failure we keep dodging
Visible street homelessness is mostly a mental illness and addiction crisis layered on a housing crisis. Policy keeps treating one and pretending the other will resolve itself.
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You might be better off ignoring your credit score for a while
Credit-score obsession can lead to worse financial decisions. Here’s why temporarily ignoring the number can be smarter than chasing it month to month.