Social Security has long been a cornerstone of American retirement planning, but with each passing year, concerns about its future continue to grow. As birth rates fall, life expectancy increases, and the baby boomer generation retires en masse, the system faces a wave of unprecedented pressure. Policymakers have sounded the alarm for decades, yet little structural change has occurred. With 2035 just around the corner,
When Safety Goes Too Far: 6 Overlooked Risks of Advanced Security
In today’s hyper-connected world, security has become a buzzword that commands attention, investment, and blind trust. From biometric locks to AI-powered surveillance systems, modern safety innovations promise to shield people from every imaginable threat. Companies pour billions into the latest technologies, while individuals embrace tools that monitor, restrict, and protect with near-total control. But for all the benefits these systems bring, there’s a quieter side
The Best Cities To Move To If You Want To Work In AI
Artificial Intelligence isn’t just the future—it’s the now. From revolutionizing healthcare to redefining how people shop, code, drive, and communicate, AI has taken center stage across virtually every industry. With global investment in AI reaching record levels, the job market for AI professionals is booming—and the location a professional chooses can make a significant difference in career growth, opportunity, and quality of life. The right
Fractured Families Are Now More Common Than Functional Ones
Once considered the cornerstone of society, the traditional nuclear family—two married parents raising their biological children—has become increasingly rare. In its place, a more fragmented, fluid, and sometimes chaotic structure has emerged. Divorce rates, cohabitation without marriage, single-parent households, and blended families are now the norm rather than the exception. What was once seen as the “typical” family is now just one of many variations,
How Marital Joy Is Being Dismantled by Screen Culture
In a world dominated by glowing screens, many couples are finding their most meaningful connections not with each other, but with devices. The small moments once shared over morning coffee or quiet evenings have been replaced by scrolling, swiping, and digital distractions. This subtle shift has made it increasingly difficult for spouses to feel seen, heard, or emotionally fulfilled. Even when couples are physically present,
Why Millennials Are Opting Out of Marriage, Mortgages, and Motherhood
For generations, the so-called American Dream was relatively straightforward: get married, buy a home, raise a family. But for a growing number of millennials, that traditional checklist has become more of a “maybe” than a mandate. This cohort, born between 1981 and 1996, is disrupting societal norms—not out of rebellion, but out of necessity, realism, and changing priorities. While older generations may scratch their heads
Are Baby Boomers the Last Generation to Truly Know Freedom?
The Baby Boomer generation—born between 1946 and 1964—entered a world defined by optimism, stability, and economic expansion. After the trauma of World War II, the Western world, particularly the United States, experienced a boom in infrastructure, job creation, and consumer growth. This era allowed Baby Boomers to come of age in a society where personal ambition could realistically translate into upward mobility. The American Dream
5 Ways Society Is Quietly Pushing Baby Boomers Aside
In the midst of rapid change and a culture increasingly obsessed with youth, Baby Boomers—once the vanguard of social, political, and economic revolutions—are finding themselves on the margins. This shift isn’t always overt or malicious. Often, it comes masked in language about “innovation,” “fresh perspectives,” or “relevance.” Yet beneath the surface, society is slowly but surely sidelining a generation that shaped much of the modern
10 Reasons Your Phone Battery Keeps Dying and How to Stop It
We’ve all been there—glancing down at our phones only to see that dreaded red sliver of battery life staring back at us. Whether it’s in the middle of an important call, during a commute, or right when you’re about to snap the perfect photo, a dying phone battery always seems to strike at the worst time. And while it might feel like your battery is
10 Things That Were Normal in 2015 But Are Outrageous in 2025
We’ve come a long way in just a decade. What once felt routine now looks like a strange artifact of a less thoughtful, less connected time. In 2015, we were still figuring out the digital world, navigating the early stages of tech dependence, and blissfully unaware of how much the world would change. Now in 2025, some of those behaviors seem almost absurd. Paying Extra









