Every time the Earth and Mars slow down enough to face each other from the same side of the sun, mission planners get a brief window – a window that comes around only once every 26 months – to dispatch a spacecraft toward the Red Planet. For most of human spaceflight history, that window has...
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Most people scrolling past the headline “Trump’s bizarre link to Erica Kirk” probably assumed it was about politics. It’s not – at least not entirely. The connection runs through rhinestones, runway walks, and a pageant organization that Trump controlled for nearly two decades. And once you understand the full picture, the word “bizarre” starts to...
Every American who has ever needed surgery, a scan, or a specialist referral knows the particular dread of those three words: “prior authorization required.” It means your doctor has already decided what you need. But before anything can happen, someone at your insurance company has to agree. That process can take hours, days, or weeks....
Something is different about tick season in 2026. Emergency rooms from Maine to Minnesota are filling up with people who walked through their own backyard, hiked a familiar trail, or let their dog off the leash in a park – and came home with an unwanted passenger. Doctors who work those ER shifts say they’ve...
A Quick Overview: Early this month, Utz Quality Foods issued a voluntary nationwide recall of nine varieties of Zapp’s and Dirty brand potato chips after the company was notified that a dry milk powder ingredient in the chips’ seasoning, sourced from California Dairies, Inc., may be contaminated with Salmonella. The recall was issued as a...
Something quietly changed in England’s E. coli story between 2016 and 2023, and most people didn’t notice. The number of cases from one particular type of the bacteria climbed year after year, almost without interruption, until the annual count had grown nearly tenfold in eight years. That’s not a blip. That’s a trend, and it’s...
The buildings that define a nation’s capital carry more weight than stone and mortar. They hold history in their facades, not just in the rooms behind them. Alter the face of one, and you alter something harder to name. A sense of continuity, of permanence, of a shared past that belongs to everyone rather than...
Something felt different about the political and media climate in late April and early May 2026. A late-night joke, a streaming platform’s editing room, and the federal government’s broadcast regulatory arm all collided in a matter of weeks. The collision pulled Melania Trump back to the center of one of the most charged press freedom...
Few presidents in modern American history have managed to ignite fury on both sides of the aisle, and across both sides of the Atlantic, quite so quickly. In the space of just over a year, the second Trump administration has set off a chain of events that has left diplomats scrambling, lawmakers demanding emergency hearings,...
Few moments in modern business history are as prescient as a single Q&A session at a Midwestern university in the spring of 1991. A student stood up and posed a deceptively simple question to one of the world’s most respected investors. The answer that came back was brief, calm, and, as history would eventually confirm,...
Few people who study history for a living expect to become internet celebrities. Fewer still get dubbed the next Nostradamus. And almost none of them find themselves in the position of watching, in real time, as the specific catastrophes they warned about begin to unfold. Yet that is exactly where Jiang Xueqin finds himself in...
Most of the vitamins you know as a “hair and nails” supplement have never made headlines in an oncology lab. For decades, biotin (vitamin B7) has lived quietly on the shelves of drugstores, associated mostly with thicker hair and stronger nails. It is not a dramatic nutrient. It’s not associated with cancer prevention or cancer...