One clinician says patients may be measuring the wrong thing.
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“It is far easier to start something than it is to finish it.”
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GLP-1 devices, in this file photo. IM Imagery/Getty Images
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One clinician says patients may be measuring the wrong thing.
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Following renewed U.S. strikes against Iran, the war has entered a new phase of hostility and uncertainty. |
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IMMIGRATION & BORDER SECURITY
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A worker on the production floor at Pioneer Pipe in Marietta, Ohio, on Oct. 25, 2016. Replacing aging gas pipelines is critical to preventing leaks, spills, and explosions. Spencer Platt/Getty Images
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Beneath the hills of Appalachia lies the nation’s largest natural gas-producing basin, yet many of the pipelines needed to move this vital resource are operating near capacity.
Meanwhile, demand for electricity is growing faster than it has in years. Data centers accounted for 50 percent of that demand growth in 2025, according to the International Energy Agency.
In the famous “Data Center Alley” of northern Virginia, energy giant Williams Companies is expanding its Transco natural gas pipeline system, while developers are proposing to build gas-fired power plants adjacent to data centers to bypass traditional grid interconnections, according to Global Energy Monitor. (Read more)
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| 📊 POLL |
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The AI Race—Who Will Be in Control?
Artificial intelligence is advancing rapidly, changing how people work, learn, create, and make decisions. As companies and nations race to develop increasingly powerful AI, important questions are emerging—not only about what AI can do, but also about how it may affect human judgment, creativity, education, relationships, and society. We invite you to share your views.
The results will be featured in an article published this Saturday. (Take the Survey).
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In the biblical story, Samson lost his eyes but gained something greater: true wisdom. Public Domain
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"Light has always been a powerful symbol in storytelling. It represents truth, knowledge, and divine presence. Yet many of history's greatest myths and sacred stories present a striking paradox: Those who gain the deepest wisdom often do so after their eyes fail, plunging them into darkness.
The Egyptian god Horus's wounded eye was a symbol of healing and wholeness. The Norse god Odin willingly sacrifices an eye in exchange for wisdom. Stories from mythology, classic literature, and the Bible suggest that genuine understanding comes only at a cost.
The pattern continues in Greek tradition. The prophet Tiresias, though blind, sees truths hidden from everyone else, while Oedipus is blind to reality until he literally blinds himself. Scripture echoes the same theme through the stories of the Apostle Paul, whose temporary blindness transforms his life, and Samson, whose greatest spiritual victory comes only after losing his sight. Even Dante's ""Divine Comedy"" presents a journey in which true vision emerges only after old ways of seeing are stripped away.
Alongside this theme is another recurring symbol: sterility. In many traditions, evil is portrayed not as a creative force but as one that diminishes, corrupts, and leaves emptiness in its wake. Together, these archetypes are profound insight into the human condition.
Rather than being isolated myths, a common thread unites these stories: The clearest vision is often found only after our ordinary sight is challenged. Wisdom begins when pride, illusion, and false certainty give way to humility." (Read more)
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The world that we’re looking at today is radically different than that of just five years ago, radically different in the sense that it is much more... (Read more)
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As a nation, we have decisively crossed into a new era as marked by the status of home ownership. It is out of reach for the rising generation of... (Read more)
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Hear me out: Cabbage just may be the perfect vegetable. Its sturdy composition means it stores well, making it one of the few vegetables consistently available year-round. In cold weather, cabbage adds freshness to stir-fries and long-simmered soups and stews. (Read more)
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