Achieving Happiness Through Acceptance of Life
The quest for happiness often leads to frustration, as many fail to realize that the...

Somewhere between the rally ticket and the ruptured friendship, between the crypto coin and the quiet erosion of your retirement account, there is a number. It is the amount you are personally willing to spend to have a leader like Donald Trump running the country. Most people have never added it up. This article asks you to try.

You pick up your phone, search for a pair of shoes, and the price you see is not the price your neighbor sees. Same shoes, same website, same moment in time, different number on the screen. That is not a glitch. That is the system working exactly as designed. Welcome to surveillance pricing, the practice that knows more about your wallet than your accountant does, and uses every bit of it against you.

There is a fact about modern poverty that almost nobody wants to say out loud: dying from heat is now, in large part, a function of income. As climate change pushes average temperatures into ranges that the human body was never designed to tolerate for extended periods, the ability to cool your home has quietly become one of the starkest dividing lines between those who are safe and those who are not. The air conditioner, once a luxury appliance, is now infrastructure for survival.

Sixty thousand human beings now control more wealth than the bottom half of humanity combined. That's fewer people than fill a football stadium holding more financial power than four billion souls.

A three-hundred-dollar solar panel that plugs into a wall outlet can begin cutting your electricity bill the same afternoon you unbox it. No permit. No installer. No roof work. More than a million of these systems are already running in Germany, sold in supermarkets alongside kitchen appliances. In the United States, the same technology is running into a wall of utility regulations that were designed for a different era — and the collision tells you everything about who really controls your electricity.

The legend of King Arthur and the Camelot vision has echoed through centuries, offering us more than knights and battles. Within the myth lies a timeless story of justice, loyalty, and renewal. From the Round Table’s promise of equality to Camelot’s fall from grace, the lessons remain urgent. In rediscovering King Arthur, we glimpse our own search for leadership, integrity, and the possibility of a better tomorrow.

What does it really take to feel happy? The answer isn’t just about money, it’s about the inequality around you. In unequal societies, the amount of income needed to feel “enough” keeps rising. This article looks at how income happiness is shaped by inequality happiness, why comparisons matter, and what this means for our well-being and the society we build together.

Insurance shrinkflation is the hidden crisis of 2025. As premiums climb, many policies now cover less while charging more. Like food product shrinkage, insurers quietly reduce coverage or raise deductibles without lowering prices. This means families are paying higher premiums for weaker protection. Understanding insurance shrinkflation is essential for protecting your financial security and making smart, empowered decisions about coverage.
Black women jobs in the federal workforce are disappearing at alarming rates, stripping away hard-won pathways to stability. As Trump’s cuts target agencies with high Black women representation, families lose security, benefits, and income. This is more than statistics, it’s a structural crisis that undermines the entire economy. When Black women lose jobs, America loses a cornerstone of its workforce and its future.

The racial wealth gap in America is no accident, it’s a legacy of policies, practices, and attitudes stretching back generations. While the headlines focus on surface-level solutions, the real roots run deeper. Understanding racial wealth and its entrenched history is the first step to building a truly fair and inclusive economy.

AI-powered personalized pricing is changing how businesses charge you—sometimes charging more just because they can. This profit-maximizing strategy thrives on your digital footprint. But there’s one simple, powerful weapon you still hold: cash. In this article, learn how your spending data is used against you and how paying with paper money can protect you in the algorithmic age.

Corporate control through monopolies like Big Ag, Big Pharma, and Big Tech has a firm grip on America. This article uncovers how these giants stifle competition, manipulate politics, and harm everyday Americans, particularly in rural areas. Discover how the Biden administration is pushing back and what steps can be taken to restore economic democracy. It’s time to reclaim power from these monopolistic corporations.

Baseball, often dubbed America's pastime, carries a rich and diverse history that has shaped the nation's identity.
How marginalized groups are working to counteract historical wealth inequality.
Buying ethically sourced products is not as straightforward as it might seem, according to the first large-scale analysis of sustainable sourcing practices.
The big, rarely asked question about our current economy is who gets the benefits of common wealth? Common wealth has several components. One consists of gifts of nature we inherit together: our atmosphere and oceans, watersheds and wetlands, forests and fertile plains, and so on (including, of course, fossil fuels).
When top-level managers find governance mechanisms too coercive, they’re more likely to commit fraud, according to a new paper.
We can refuse to accept the pervasive, but false, claims that money is wealth and a growing GDP improves the lives of all.
One of Bernie Sanders’s most important proposals didn’t receive enough attention and should become a law even without a president Sanders. Hillary Clinton should adopt it for her campaign.
There would be no Cesar Chavez without the Filipino manongs of Delano, California, whose decision to strike set off the most significant labor movement the United States has ever seen.
Cities and states fork over an estimated $70 billion each year to large companies that don’t need public assistance to thrive. We could spend that money on our own neighborhoods.