RA

May 16 2026EDUCATION

Where the Past Meets the Sea: What Digging Revealed About Florida’s First Residents

Over two thousand years ago, long before rockets screamed into space from Cape Canaveral, Indigenous groups lived along the Atlantic coast. Today, students working near the famous launch pad are piecing together how these early Floridians spent their days. Instead of clearing fields for crops, they

reading time less than a minute
May 16 2026CRYPTO

Real-World Tokens Could Fix Crypto’s Messy Money Problems

A lot of trading still runs on old-school delays and paperwork. Big companies can’t move their stocks, bonds, or cash fast enough across borders or even between different banks. This friction costs them real money—like having a car stuck in traffic when it could be earning miles. Tokenizing these as

reading time less than a minute
May 16 2026ENVIRONMENT

Water Fight Brewing Over Colorado River Use

The U. S. government just stepped into a messy water battle with a bold plan that could change how seven states share the Colorado River. For two decades, these states followed an old agreement that’s now falling apart as drought and overuse drain the river dry. The new proposal aims to slash water

reading time less than a minute
May 16 2026POLITICS

Diplomacy without deals: What Trump’s China visit really meant

Donald Trump returned from China with smiles and handshakes, but very few real promises. He called the trip “great” mostly because China announced plans to buy 200 Boeing jets and billions in soybeans. Those deals sound big, but no one has seen the fine print. Even the biggest moments were unclear:

reading time less than a minute
May 16 2026POLITICS

Politics today: Why do some leaders go along with obvious untruths?

Trump’s inner circle didn’t just approve his biggest claims—they repeated them in public regardless of facts. Recent analysis points to a pattern where leading figures adjust reality to match the president’s version. One example is a top adviser’s claim this month that credit card spending is at rec

reading time less than a minute
May 16 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Iranian Filmmaker Speaks Out Amidst Turmoil: A Personal and Global Perspective

A top Iranian filmmaker recently shared strong feelings about events back home. He had just been in Tehran last week and right now, those memories and headlines still weigh on him. The problems he's talking about – protests crushed in January and new conflicts that started in late February – aren’t

reading time less than a minute
May 16 2026CRYPTO

My Pet Hooligan mixes crypto with cartoons in a bold new experiment

Back in 2026 the team behind My Pet Hooligan decided to launch its new digital token $HOOLI at the exact moment the 30th episode of its animated series dropped. Instead of a boring press release, the token launch became the climax of a story arc called “Hell or High Hooli, ” a 30-episode comedy that

reading time less than a minute
May 16 2026CELEBRITIES

When Private Moments Go Public: The Risks of Recording Arguments

A video of Cardi B and Stefon Diggs in a tense moment outside a coffee shop spread fast online, even though no one could hear what was being said. The clip showed tense body language, sparking wild guesses about what went wrong. Social media users filled the silence with their own theories, but thos

reading time less than a minute
May 16 2026CELEBRITIES

Gina Carano’s Mixed Roots and the Comeback That Started a Conversation

Gina Carano isn’t just stepping back into the MMA ring after 17 years—she’s walking in with a background as layered as her fighting style. Born in Texas but raised mostly in Nevada, she grew up in a family where sports and showbiz ran deep. Her dad played pro football, and her mom had her own career

reading time less than a minute
May 16 2026BUSINESS

Cuba’s Fuel Prices Jump While Pumps Stay Dry

Cuba just doubled the price of gasoline and diesel, but good luck finding an open station. Most pumps in Havana have been shut for weeks, leaving drivers clueless about where—or when—they can actually buy fuel. The government claims the price hike reflects "real" import costs, but with no deliveries

reading time less than a minute