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May 18 2026SCIENCE

Farmers Face a New Invader: How Ghana’s Maize Growers Fight the Fall Armyworm

Maize farmers in Ghana are battling a relentless pest that threatens their income and food security. The insect, known as the fall armyworm, has spread across the country, damaging crops and making it hard for farmers to keep up. Researchers studied how these growers view the problem and what tactic

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May 18 2026HEALTH

Kid Stones in Children: A Safer, Smarter Mini‑Surgery Approach

A new study shows that a small‑scale kidney stone removal surgery, called mini‑PCNL, can be done safely in children even when resources are limited. The procedure uses a tiny tube to reach the stone and a special device that breaks it apart with bursts of air. The research compares two ways to br

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May 18 2026HEALTH

Kidney‑Toxin Research: A Global Trend Review

The study looks back at how scientists have talked about kidney toxins over more than three decades. It tracks articles published from 1991 to 2024, showing how interest in these substances has risen. The work identifies which countries and institutions publish most papers, pointing out leadin

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May 18 2026SCIENCE

Co‑Atom Design Turns Water into Hydrogen Peroxide Efficiently

Scientists have found a new way to make hydrogen peroxide directly from water using tiny metal atoms. The trick is to arrange the atoms in a special pattern before heating them up, so that when the metal (cobalt) sits next to three nitrogen atoms and one oxygen atom it works best. This pattern is ca

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May 18 2026FINANCE

Budget Carelessness Weakens Nations

A growing debt problem means a nation can no longer act on its promises. When politicians focus on short‑term popularity—cutting taxes or adding programs that the budget cannot support—they give up long‑term stability. Even if a state or country has big ideas, its future is cut short by the co

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May 18 2026POLITICS

Massachusetts Faces New Campaign‑Finance Debate

Senator Rebecca Rausch has introduced a budget amendment that would remove the clause in state law allowing candidates to spend unlimited amounts on their own campaigns. The proposal, called “Elections Not For Sale, ” targets the practice that let billionaire Mike Minogue pour more than $13 million

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May 18 2026OPINION

How poverty shapes lives over time

Most poverty studies focus on either big systems or personal choices, but both miss the bigger picture. One side blames society’s flaws—bad jobs, weak wages, or poor policies. The other side blames individuals—bad habits, poor decisions, or weak willpower. Neither view captures how poverty actually

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May 18 2026POLITICS

Politics This Week: Phones Tossed, Trades Flooded And Jabs At Iran Claims

A busy week in politics kicked off with a security step that raised eyebrows. After President Trump’s meeting with China’s leader, staff on Air Force One were told to trash phones and pins given out during the trip. The reason? Keeping sensitive tech away from a country known for cyber spying. It’s

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May 18 2026BUSINESS

Glass or Plastic? Why More Brands Are Swapping Containers

A quiet revolution is happening on store shelves. Premium brands are ditching plastic in favor of glass, not just to save the planet—but to sell more stuff. Data shows that 89% of high-end companies plan to make the switch by 2026. Why? Because glass screams “this is special” far louder than any lab

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May 18 2026POLITICS

Global Money Talks: Can the G7 Fix What’s Broken?

Leaders from seven major economies meet in Paris this week to talk about why global money isn’t flowing fairly. The two-day chat starts after a flashy meeting between the U. S. and China wrapped up with more handshakes than real deals. Trade fights and raw material grabber are still stealing the sho

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