Author: Daniel Keem
-
ADHD diagnosis rates are out of control — and partly justified
ADHD diagnoses have surged, and the panic is loud. But the surge reflects real catch-up for women, adults, and patients missed by an outdated screening playbook.
-
Couponing is a part-time job we pretend is a hobby
Extreme couponing returns real savings, but the hourly rate often doesn’t pencil. The activity is work disguised as leisure for most people.
-
Reverse mortgages are predatory, full stop
Marketing paints reverse mortgages as a tool for retirees, but the fees, terms, and outcomes tell a different story. Here’s why most homeowners should walk away.
-
Labels Don’t Tell the Full Story
Food labels, supplement claims, and product certifications look authoritative. The gap between what they say and what they mean is wider than buyers realize.
-
The stand-down order myth and NORAD’s actual timeline
The 9/11 stand-down theory has lingered for two decades. The 9/11 Commission record and NORAD timelines tell a more complicated story than the slogan.
-
Settlement Offers Are Often Strategic
Settlement offers look like compromise but function as strategy. Understanding the playbook helps litigants read offers more clearly.
-
What the 9/11 Commission Report actually concluded — and what it didn’t
The 9/11 Commission Report is widely cited and rarely read. Here’s what it actually concluded, what it left open, and what critics on every side miss.
-
Box cutters, training, and the operational record of the 19 hijackers
The 19 hijackers behind 9/11 left a documented operational trail. Here’s what investigators actually found about their tools, training, and preparation.
-
Real estate agents are an industry overdue for collapse
Six percent commissions survived the internet, antitrust suits, and consumer revolt. Their grip is finally weakening — here’s what comes next.