• Revolutionary New Understanding Of Autism In Girls

    Autistic girls have been overlooked for decades because science mostly studied boys. Many girls hide their struggles to fit in, leading to stress and late or missed diagnoses. New research shows their brains work differently, pushing experts to rethink autism so it truly reflects both genders.

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  • India’s Global Influence On Human Rights

    India’s global influence is growing, but its stance on human rights is increasingly aligning with authoritarian countries. While historically a champion for human rights, India is now prioritizing counterterrorism and digital sovereignty, raising concerns about privacy and freedom. As India seeks leadership in global forums, its actions warrant closer scrutiny.

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  • My Business Is Intentionally Unprofitable

    Building a startup isn’t just about quick profits—it’s about having the flexibility to become profitable when needed. Focusing on customer retention, smart spending, and solid growth strategies gives businesses control. The key is balancing growth with the ability to adjust for profitability when the market shifts.

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  • What The ‘Bhagavad Gita’ Can Teach Us About AI

    AI might be changing the world, but it lacks the lived experience that gives wisdom its depth. As we embrace AI, we must balance innovation with ethical reflection. Decisions about AI impact society and require careful thought to ensure technology benefits humanity without replacing human judgment.

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  • Solar Power Reaching Critical Tipping Point In US

    Solar power is no longer a fringe player—it’s dominating America’s energy shift. In 2024 alone, it accounted for 84% of new power capacity, fueled by tech giants’ demand, smarter technology, and federal incentives. Despite challenges like grid delays and rising costs, innovation and market momentum are cementing solar as the U.S.’s leading energy source.

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  • Paying For Shipping & Economic Resistance

    Free shipping may feel like a perk, but it quietly fuels overconsumption, hurts workers, and crushes small businesses. By choosing to pay for shipping, consumers can push back against exploitative practices, slow down impulse buying, support local sellers, and help restore value to goods, labor, patience—and the planet.

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  • The Pursuit of Usefulness

    Major discoveries like GPS and electricity came from pure curiosity, not immediate use. But the Trump administration’s science cuts threaten this spirit, risking future innovation and real harm, from rising diseases to weakened climate research. The cost of slashing science is clearer than its short-term savings.

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  • Bangladesh Offers to Import More From the US

    Faced with steep new U.S. tariffs on garment exports, Bangladesh, led by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, acted swiftly to protect its economy. By proposing to boost imports from the U.S. and cut trade barriers, Yunus turned a trade threat into a diplomatic opportunity while stabilizing the economy post-Hasina era.

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  • Cuts to Science the End of the Endless Frontier?

    The US push for science and tech progress is falling apart as the Trump administration cuts research jobs, cancels billions in funding, and blocks studies it disagrees with. This threatens key industries, global health projects, and drives top scientists abroad due to rising uncertainty.

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  • Trade Wars Are Easy To Lose

    Trump’s 100 percent tariffs on China could hurt the US more, as it depends on China for key goods. China can adjust more easily. Experts warn this trade war may cause shortages, rising prices, and economic trouble without any real benefit for the US.

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