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Don’t Know, Don’t Care: The Case for Living Beyond the News
By any measure, we live in an era of unrelenting noise. Twenty-four hours a day, the media pours headlines into our feeds, our phones, and our living rooms. The churn is endless, the urgency constant, the outrage addictive. Yet, for the vast majority of people, 99.999% of it makes no difference whatsoever to their actual…
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The Lost Ray Gun: How the B Movie Abandoned Science Fiction and Found Horror
For decades, “B movie” meant something very specific: goofy, low-budget cinema that leaned on science fiction spectacle or slapstick comedy to entertain the masses while the “A feature” handled prestige. These weren’t films meant to impress critics—they were films meant to fill drive-ins, grindhouses, and double bills. They were the pulpy lifeblood of mid-century movie…
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The Gospel of the Dark Cover Song: Why Haunting Reinterpretations Are the True Voice of Modern Music
There is a certain kind of electricity that runs down the spine when a familiar song is stripped bare and rebuilt in a darker, heavier, more haunting form. It’s not mere novelty. It’s revelation. A dark cover song does what pop music too often cannot—it pulls us under the surface, into the shadows where truth…
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Why Minorities Owe Their Happiness to the Majority
It is an incontrovertible fact, at least according to those of us who already agreed with ourselves in advance, that minorities would simply not be happy were it not for the benevolent scaffolding provided by the majority. Like benevolent landlords of the American Dream, the majority graciously allows minorities to rent small parcels of joy,…
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Normal
If you could permanently ban a word from general usage, which one would it be? Why? If I could permanently ban a word from general usage, I might choose “normal.” Not because it is offensive.Not because it is crude.But because I suspect it is a fossil — a placeholder word left behind after better words…
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The Hidden 401(k) You Already Own
Modern retirement planning has a bias. It worships the account balance. Open any calculator and the first question is always the same: How much do you have saved? The implicit assumption is that security is a pile of money invested in markets, patiently yielding 4% per year. But many retirees already own something more powerful…
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The Strange Dance of Self-Interest in American Voting
In a nation where politics often masquerades as identity, one of the most enduring puzzles is why so many Americans walk into the voting booth and cast ballots that undermine their own material well-being. At the same time, other groups, with almost mechanical precision, pull the lever for policies that secure their rights, protections, or…
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Thomas Burnet’s The Sacred Theory of the Earth was once a bridge between faith and reason—an audacious attempt to reconcile the new natural philosophy with old scripture. But in hindsight, it also stands as a warning of how easily theology can drown inquiry when belief demands obedience and reason is made to serve it. And disturbingly, that old temptation is returning.
The World Burnet Imagined Burnet believed Earth began as a perfect, divine sphere—a smooth creation unmarred by mountains, seas, or scars. He taught that the Great Flood, not slow geology, carved the features we see today, and that one day fire would purify the world again. His goal wasn’t deception but devotion: to defend faith…
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When language collapses, thinking collapses with it.
Few areas demonstrate this more clearly than the way public discourse handles terms like pedophilia, hebephilia, and ephebophilia. In headlines, commentary, and social media outrage cycles, these distinct clinical categories are often flattened into a single word. The result is emotional clarity — and conceptual confusion. This is not a defense of exploitation. It is…
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The Case for Apathy: Why Caring Less May Be the Healthiest Choice
By The Author We live in a culture that treats caring as a moral duty. We are told to care about our jobs, our reputations, our relationships, our politics, our social media feeds. Self-help gurus urge us to “lean in.” Motivational speakers tell us to “find our passion.” Corporations urge us to “bring our whole…