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May 15 2026LIFESTYLE

Rethinking luxury: The real markers of a good life today

A few decades ago, luxury meant flashing designer labels and expensive cars. Today, the people who truly live well have moved far beyond that. Real luxury isn’t about loud displays or expensive items. Instead, it’s about rare experiences, thoughtful choices, and personal freedom. It’s less about own

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May 15 2026HEALTH

A Simple Way to Support Aging with Gummies

Many people want to slow down aging but don’t like swallowing pills. A new option comes in the form of chewy gummies packed with a special ingredient called C15:0. Unlike most anti-aging supplements that rely on vitamins, these gummies focus on a fatty acid rarely discussed in mainstream health tren

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May 14 2026POLITICS

CNN’s Big Shift: From 24‑Hour News to Opinion Town Hall

In the early 1980s, a visionary named Ted Turner introduced CNN, turning news into a nonstop feed that reshaped how people learn about the world. The network’s promise was simple: deliver news anytime, anywhere. This idea borrowed from radio but pushed it into a new visual arena, sparking both excit

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May 14 2026CRYPTO

Bitcoin’s Growing Journey and Why It Still Fluctuates

The former White House communications chief shared his thoughts about digital money, saying that paper cash only works because people believe in it. He compared Bitcoin to a modern version of money that is open, clear and managed by computers all over the world. Because it runs on a computer p

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May 14 2026ENVIRONMENT

River Watch: Spotting City and Farm Pollution

A new system has been set up to tell the difference between pollution that comes from a city and pollution that comes from farms or factories. The idea is to help people fix the river faster by knowing exactly where bad water is coming from. The project was tested on the Sile River in Treviso,

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May 14 2026POLITICS

Property Gift Sparks Legal Battle in Miami

Miami residents and a local nonprofit have filed a lawsuit against Florida officials, the state’s legislature, Miami‑Dade College and its board, as well as the Donald J. Trump Presidential Library Foundation. They claim that giving a 2. 63‑acre parcel of land to the library is an unconstitutional ad

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May 14 2026ENTERTAINMENT

When Heroes Doubt Their Own Strength

The latest season shows familiar fighters learning a tough lesson: raw power means nothing if the opponent can’t be touched. Marie Moreau and Jordan Li, normally confident in their skills, face an opponent unlike any other—Homelander. He isn’t just strong; he can fly through solid walls, blast energ

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May 14 2026HEALTH

When Memory Fades, Moments of Clarity Appear

Around four in every ten people caring for those with memory loss have seen surprising moments of sharpness. That's what a large nationwide study discovered after surveying nearly 6, 000 caregivers and family members. These brief returns to clarity happen to patients with Alzheimer's or other memor

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May 13 2026SCIENCE

Milk Mix‑Up: Spotting Coconut in Cow’s Milk

A new test can quickly find coconut milk hidden in dairy. The method uses a special light that shows how the two drinks glow differently. Scientists shine three colors of light on milk samples and record their glow patterns. They found that two natural dyes – one from tryptophan and another

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May 13 2026TECHNOLOGY

Tech You Think is New That’s Actually Super Old

Many gadgets we use today feel cutting-edge, but they often started decades earlier. The internet, for example, began in the 1960s as a military experiment called ARPANET. It was designed to stay online even if parts of it got destroyed—so data packets could reroute like a game of hot potato until t

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