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Bitcoin, once hailed as the "digital gold" of the 21st century, is plunging faster than headlines can keep up. While financial volatility is nothing new, this episode feels different. Bitcoin's decline is occurring against a backdrop of global macroeconomic uncertainty, weakening tech stocks, and geopolitical tensions.
Canada's long-running effort to rein in firearms ownership has entered a strange and revealing phase--one that should concern not only gun owners, but anyone uneasy with government power stretching beyond practical limits.
Once again, Scouting America is in the headlines--and unsurprisingly, it appears the organization is weighing whether its convictions are negotiable.
On the surface, preparedness sounds wise. But prudence becomes something far darker when preparation quietly shifts power away from nations, families, churches, and consciences--and concentrates it in the hands of unelected global authorities.
A humanoid robot unveiled recently in Shanghai is not merely another step forward in artificial intelligence - it is a signal flare for where humanity may be heading. Developed by the Chinese firm DroidUp, the robot known as Moya has captured global attention for one unsettling reason: it does not behave like a machine.
By 2030, nearly half of women between the ages of 25 and 44 are expected to be single and child-free. Not delayed. Not undecided. But living outside marriage and motherhood during what has historically been considered the prime years for building a family.
For weeks, a quiet but determined movement has been building across Canada. It hasn't involved riots, burning streets, or angry mobs. Instead, it has taken shape through phone calls, town halls, petitions, prayer, and persistent civic engagement. And--for now--it has worked.
In recent weeks, seismic activity along the Pacific Ring of Fire--particularly along California's coastline and inland fault systems--has intensified. What many hoped would be a brief period of tremors has instead become a steady drumbeat of geological reminders that California sits on borrowed time.
A recent jury verdict marks the first tremor in a building earthquake that may sever the transgender child mutilation pipeline, setting the stage for a host of lawsuits that threaten to end the medical establishment's promotion of "gender-affirming care."