
If you’ve seen gender-affirming care discussed one way and menopause care another, it’s easy to assume medicine is playing favorites. The real story is messier: timing, routes, goals, and one study that never left the culture — even after the science moved on.

Henry VIII pursued Anne Boleyn for seven years, split from the Catholic Church to marry her, and had her executed three years later. History called it a love story. Psychology calls it something else.

In the 1970s, four-kid families were common. Today, nearly two-thirds of women with children only have one or two. The middle child — already the most overlooked sibling — is quietly disappearing. Nobody has noticed. Which tracks.

Mary Ann Bevan was a London nurse, a wife, a mother of four. Then a disease stole her face, her husband died, and the world refused to hire her. What she did next is one of the most quietly devastating acts of love in recorded history

Georgia wide receiver Colbie Young was booked at 4:18 a.m. on charges of battery and assault on an unborn child. He is the seventh Bulldog arrested in 2024. At some point this stops being bad luck

The United States has conducted nearly 500 military interventions since 1776 — roughly one every seven months. That’s not a foreign policy. That’s a habit. And the names of the wars tell you everything about who controls the narrative.

A professor published a paper arguing that brain-dead women should be kept alive and used as surrogate mothers. A medical association endorsed it. Then came the backlash — and the apology they were forced to make
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