Fingers on a Keyboard: A human written blog about blogging before AI.
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Comprehensive coverage is rarely worth it on older vehicles
Comprehensive auto insurance on an older car often costs more in premiums than you’d ever recover. Here’s the math and when to drop the coverage.
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Why some people stay poor on purpose
Some people choose to stay below middle-class income on purpose. The reasons are more rational, and more revealing about the system, than they first appear.
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The unbundled services deception: when limited scope representation leaves you exposed
Cheap flat-fee divorce services promise simplicity but quietly shift legal liability to the client. Here’s what unbundled representation actually covers, and what it doesn’t.
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Leslie Wexner and Jeffrey Epstein: anatomy of an unprecedented financial relationship
How L Brands founder Leslie Wexner gave Jeffrey Epstein sweeping power of attorney and a Manhattan townhouse, and what the arrangement reveals about elite finance.
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Why some plastic containers stain instantly and others never do
Tomato sauce ruins some food containers and slides off others. The answer comes down to plastic type, surface energy, and how oils interact with polymers.
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Why some car headlights blind everyone and others don’t
Modern headlights have gotten brighter and meaner. Here’s the actual reason some blind oncoming drivers, and why regulation hasn’t kept up with the technology.
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Grade inflation has made GPA meaningless above the high school level
When most students get A’s, GPA stops measuring anything. Here’s how grade inflation broke the signal and what employers and grad schools use instead.
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Indemnification clauses are where deals quietly become traps
Indemnification language looks like boilerplate but quietly reallocates massive risk. Here’s how these clauses work and where they go wrong.
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Neurodivergent has lost all clinical meaning
The word neurodivergent now stretches from autism to introversion. That’s not solidarity — it’s semantic collapse, and it makes real diagnoses harder.
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