Author: Daniel Keem
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Why cycling supplements might make more sense
Taking the same supplements year-round may waste money and dull effects. Cycling on and off can preserve benefits, reduce risk, and save cash.
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The Black Book: What Epstein’s Contact List Actually Tells Us
Jeffrey Epstein’s so-called black book has fueled endless speculation. Here’s what the document actually contained, and why a contact isn’t a coconspirator.
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Christian healthshare ministries are unregulated insurance cosplay
Healthshare ministries look like cheap insurance, but they’re not insurance and not regulated like it. Here’s what members actually buy and what they don’t.
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How conspiracy theories monetize: the truther economy
Conspiracy theories now run on subscriptions, supplements, and ad revenue. Here’s how the truther economy turns suspicion into a business model.
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Some supplements can worsen health conditions
Vitamins and herbal supplements can interact with medications and aggravate conditions. Here’s what’s commonly missed in the wellness aisle.
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Most Hacks Start With Simple Mistakes
Cybersecurity headlines suggest sophisticated attackers, but the data tells a different story. Most breaches still trace back to basic, preventable mistakes.
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The four-year degree should be killed and replaced with three
The four-year bachelor’s is a historical accident, not a learning requirement. A three-year degree saves money, time, and student burnout without losing rigor.
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Short-Term Benefits Don’t Equal Long-Term Results
Quick wins are seductive but misleading. Here’s why early gains in fitness, finance, and habits often fade — and what predicts results that actually compound.
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Medication Side Effects Are Underreported
Most prescription side effects never make it into official data. Here’s why the system misses so much, and how to advocate for yourself when something feels off.
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Surrogacy contracts are a legal minefield states keep dodging
Surrogacy law varies wildly across U.S. states, leaving families and carriers exposed to disputes that legislatures keep refusing to resolve.