<p>If you’ve spent time around anyone navigating US immigration, you already know the system rewards patience and punishes surprises. There’s a maze of forms, priority dates, and waiting periods that can stretch for years, and most people who get deep into it have made major life decisions around its assumptions. They’ve bought homes, had children,…</p>
Author: Sean Cate
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<p>Most Americans over 55 will tell you they don’t feel like they’re doing particularly well. The retirement anxiety in this country is real and pervasive, and the constant drumbeat of scary statistics about savings shortfalls has a way of making even people in genuinely solid financial shape feel like they’re failing some invisible test. The…</p>
<p>You close the last tab of a video call, open a new document, and start typing. Thirty seconds later, there’s a weight on your wrists. A chin on the keyboard. A tail draped across the trackpad with what can only be described as deliberate calm. Your cat, who has been asleep in another room for…</p>
<p>OpenAI is offering a $445,000 research role focused on self-improving AI systems, and the job listing has generated serious attention well beyond Silicon Valley. Not because the salary is extraordinary by OpenAI standards – it isn’t – but because of the candid, oddly philosophical language the company used to describe who it’s looking for. The…</p>
<p>Some of the most anticipated television of the year was announced not with a trailer, not with a press release, but with a birthday. On May 8, 2026, as the world gathered to celebrate Sir David Attenborough turning 100, the BBC slipped in a piece of news that felt entirely fitting for the occasion: he…</p>
<p>When a former Secretary of Defense goes on national television and says he told the Israeli Prime Minister he was “dead wrong,” not privately, not in a memo, but on camera, it’s the kind of moment that cuts through the political noise. Not because it’s partisan. Robert Gates served Republican and Democratic presidents. The warning…</p>
<p>Dengue fever has been circulating in the tropics for centuries, and for most of U.S. history it was a disease that Americans encountered only in textbooks or on international news segments. Not something you picked up at home. Not something a doctor in suburban Florida needed to keep in the front of their mind during…</p>
<p>Retirement was supposed to mean fewer bills, not a different set of money worries. The mortgage might be behind you, the daily commute long gone. But for millions of older Americans, money still feels tight – healthcare costs keep rising, groceries take a bigger bite every month, and the Social Security check never quite stretches…</p>
<p>Raccoons have been sharing our neighborhoods for long enough that most people have settled into a vague truce with them. You see one on the fence, it stares at you for a moment, you stare back, and eventually one of you moves on. They knock over the bins, they eat the cat food left on…</p>
<p>When a city gets a low score on a national education list, the reaction is predictable. Local officials often question the report, while residents go online to defend their hometown. Soon after, the conversation dies down, and no one asks the harder questions: Why do the same cities always end up at the bottom, and…</p>
<p>Imagine rewatching a movie from the 90s where you start it half-asleep on a Tuesday night, absolutely certain you’ve seen it a dozen times and know exactly what you’re getting. And then something catches you off guard. A line that lands differently. A performance you missed entirely the first time. A scene that turns out…</p>
<p>Most people, when they hear the word “narcissist,” picture a single recognizable villain. The charming but hollow partner. The boss who takes credit for everything. The friend who somehow turns every conversation back to themselves. What gets talked about less is the version that lives inside a family home, behind closed doors, in the years…</p>