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May 14 2026HEALTH

Mindfulness in the Digital Age for Older Adults

Taiwan is aging fast. Nearly one in seven people there are over 65. That’s why finding ways to help older adults stay healthy is important. Many studies show that mindfulness can improve sleep and mental health. But mindfulness isn’t one-size-fits-all. Most programs focus on stress reduction, missin

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May 14 2026LIFESTYLE

When Love Meets Faith: The Challenges of Merging Two Worlds

Dating often starts with sparks—shared jokes over coffee, late-night chats, and maybe even a few awkward first family dinners. But what happens when those sparks meet a wall built by tradition? A woman from Argentina, raised in a Jewish household, found herself in exactly that spot after matching wi

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May 14 2026TECHNOLOGY

Why Your Local Shop Might Need to Speak AI’s Language

Local stores and services often assume their biggest challenge is competing with big brands. But in 2026, something quieter is changing how customers find them—artificial intelligence. A recent look at how AI picks local recommendations showed some surprising truths. Most small businesses barely get

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May 13 2026RELIGION

Rebooting Muslim Bioethics: A Call for Thoughtful Debate

Islamic bioethics is a new field that still has many gaps. Most scholars rely on strict legal rules, but they rarely ask deeper moral questions or consider social realities. This approach leaves the discipline without strong ethical principles and makes its conclusions weak. The paper urges a retur

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May 13 2026SPORTS

Strickland’s Apology Faces Backlash Over Religion‑Related Trash Talk

Belal Muhammad, a former UFC champion, publicly denounced Sean Strickland after the latter’s remarks about Khamzat Chimaev’s family and faith during UFC 328. The comments sparked anger when Strickland, known for his heated promos, later apologized to Muslim fans, but Muhammad argued the apology was

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May 13 2026POLITICS

Kentucky GOP House Race: New Voices, Old Faith

The northern part of Boone and Kenton counties is heating up as three Republican candidates vie for a seat that represents about 43, 000 residents. Incumbent Kim Banta, who entered office in 2019 after a long career in education, faces her first primary challenger. Her opponents, Cole Cuzick and Set

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May 13 2026ENVIRONMENT

A Quiet Plan to Change the Air We Breathe

Back in 2024, a scientific paper suggested something that sounds straight out of a doomsday movie: spraying fungus into the sky. Not just any fungus, but specific types known to cause coughs, allergies, and worse. The reason? Supposedly to fight climate change by tweaking clouds and rain. But what s

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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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May 13 2026CRIME

Why a young man's life ended over a dance move

A teenage boy stabbed a gay Black dancer to death last summer in Brooklyn, not because he felt threatened, but because he took offense to the way the man was dancing. Prosecutors say the 17-year-old, who brought a knife to a gas station showdown, acted out of pure hatred, calling it a classic case o

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May 13 2026POLITICS

Senators push to make social media safer for kids

A major step forward for online safety laws happened when a top Republican senator spoke in favor of a bill that would hold social media companies accountable for harming young users. The senator, who leads a key committee, made the announcement during a gathering near the Capitol with parents who l

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