Author: Daniel Keem
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Virginia Giuffre’s Story: From Mar-a-Lago Locker Room to Global Whistleblower
Virginia Giuffre’s account moved the Epstein case from rumor to record. Here’s the documented arc from her teenage recruitment to her role as the most prominent accuser.
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The Lolita Express: A Closer Look at Epstein’s Boeing 727 and Its Passenger Manifest
The Epstein flight logs are widely cited but often misread. Here’s what the manifests for his Boeing 727 actually document and what they don’t.
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Why Paying Your Card Off Weekly Might Be Pointless
Paying your credit card every week feels disciplined, but it usually accomplishes nothing extra. Here’s what actually moves your score and your interest.
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Why Consistency Beats Intensity
Intense bursts feel productive but rarely compound. Consistent small efforts quietly outperform them across fitness, savings, writing, and almost everything else.
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Why You Should Stop Obsessing Over Being Debt-Free
Being debt-free feels virtuous, but mathematically it’s often the wrong goal. Here’s when paying off debt early actually costs you long-term wealth.
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You Can’t Out-Supplement a Poor Diet
The supplement aisle promises to cover your nutritional gaps. The research keeps showing pills don’t replace what whole foods deliver. Here’s why.
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Capital gains rates are the reason inequality keeps widening
Wages get taxed at full rates while investment income gets a discount. The capital gains gap explains more about wealth concentration than most policy debates admit.
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Operation Northwoods: why a 1962 memo became Exhibit A for truthers
A declassified 1962 Pentagon memo proposed staged attacks to justify war with Cuba. Here’s why Operation Northwoods became a permanent reference for skeptics.
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Most people won’t follow their own emergency plan
Households make emergency plans they never rehearse and won’t execute under stress. The research on actual disaster behavior is sobering — and useful.