Fingers on a Keyboard: A human written blog about blogging before AI.
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The false flag framework and how it migrated from 9/11 to every event since
The false flag template that crystallized after 9/11 has been applied to nearly every major news event since. Here’s how the framework spreads and why it persists.
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Pizzagate and the media: how newsrooms struggled to cover a conspiracy without amplifying it
Pizzagate forced newsrooms to confront a hard question: can you debunk a conspiracy without spreading it further? The lessons shaped later coverage of QAnon and election claims.
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Success looks different for everyone
The standard success template, money, title, prestige, fits a small share of people. Here’s why redefining success on your own terms is harder than it sounds.
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Real estate isn’t passive income, it’s a second job
Rental real estate is sold as passive income, but the time, risk, and operational work it actually requires put it closer to a second job than a portfolio.
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Job hopping isn’t a red flag anymore
Hiring managers still mention job hopping as a concern, but the data and the modern career structure both say it’s no longer the disqualifier it used to be.
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Communication plans are often overlooked
Most project failures are communication failures, not technical ones. Here’s why teams skip the plan and what a working one actually contains.
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Why medical errors are more common than expected
Medical errors are a leading cause of preventable harm in U.S. hospitals. Here’s why the system fails so often and what patients can actually do about it.
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Detox supplements don’t do what you think
Your liver and kidneys already detox you. The supplement industry has built a billion-dollar category solving a problem your body solved before lunch.
Have you got any recommendations?