Fish to Enjoy and Fish to Avoid: What’s Best for Your Health and the Planet
Fish can be one of the healthiest and most sustainable protein sources—if you know which ones to choose. Some species are loaded with beneficial omega-3 fatty acids, are low in mercury, and are harvested in ways that support ocean ecosystems. Others, unfortunately, contain higher levels of toxins or come from overfished or poorly managed sources. Here’s a guide to five of...
Can’t Go #2? Snack on Raisins—Here’s Why They Work
If your digestive system is dragging, your snack drawer might hold the answer. Raisins, those wrinkly little sweet bombs, aren’t just good in cookies—they’re surprisingly effective for getting things moving when you’re backed up. About 16% of U.S. adults regularly struggle with constipation. It can show up as fewer than three bowel movements a week, hard stools, straining, or the...
Scientists Finally Fix The Urinal Splash Dilemma —And It’s About Time
For over a century, the urinal has gone virtually unchanged—along with the age-old annoyance of splashback. However, engineers from the University of Waterloo and Weber State University have just cracked the code using basic physics and an innovative redesign that could revolutionize public restroom hygiene. Their study, published in PNAS Nexus, reveals that the splash problem is all about the...
Why Your Hospital Room Might Not Be As Safe As It Looks
Hospitals may appear clean, but a silent threat is lurking: Clostridioides difficile (C. diff), a dangerous bacteria responsible for over 12,800 deaths and 223,000 hospitalizations annually in the U.S., is spreading in ways we've underestimated. A new University of Utah study uncovered how C. diff silently travels—not just through infected patients but via hospital staff and contaminated surfaces. Over a...
Brown Rice vs. White Rice: The Shocking Truth About Your “Healthy” Grain
Brown rice has long worn the crown as the healthier choice—richer in fiber, packed with nutrients, and less processed than white rice. But a new study is flipping that narrative on its head. Researchers from Michigan State University have confirmed that brown rice contains significantly higher levels of toxic arsenic than white rice—and the difference isn’t small. Here’s the twist:...
Cold Medicine Recalled Nationwide Due to Child Safety Risk — Here’s What You Need to Know
Roughly 14,250 packs of Safetussin Max Strength Multi-Symptom Cough, Cold and Flu have been recalled due to packaging that fails to meet child-resistant standards, posing a serious risk of accidental poisoning. Kramer Laboratories, the manufacturer, announced the voluntary recall after the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) flagged that children could easily push tablets through the foil backing. The medicine contains...
NASA Will Pay You $3 Million to Turn Space Poop into Gold (Well… Almost)
Think your recycling game is strong? NASA wants to put it to the ultimate test—by asking you to turn human waste into something useful… in space. As part of the LunaRecycle Challenge, NASA is dangling a juicy $3 million prize for anyone who can solve one of the least glamorous problems of deep space travel: what to do with all...
Where Things Stand with the $5,000 DOGE Dividend Checks
Talks are heating up around the potential $5,000 “DOGE dividend” refund check — a bold proposal aimed at returning federal savings to taxpayers. First introduced by Azoria CEO James Fishback on Elon Musk’s platform X, the idea has picked up real momentum in Washington. Fishback, who recently met with lawmakers in D.C., told Chris Cuomo he’s “very optimistic” the checks...
Idaho Leads the Nation with Bold Medical Freedom Law
Idaho just made history. Governor Brad Little signed the Idaho Medical Freedom Act, a groundbreaking bill that bans vaccine mandates across both public and private sectors—making Idaho the first state in America to take such a bold stand for individual rights. Under this new law, schools, businesses, and government agencies can no longer deny services, employment, or access based on...
Stop Putting Toilet Paper On The Seat And Do This Instead
Like many people, I have a love/hate relationship with public restrooms. Yes, they’re necessary — for the obvious reasons — but oh how I hate to use them. I just know they’re teeming with germs. If you’re like me, you probably think putting a layer of toilet paper on the toilet seat will help protect you from some of...










