Endometriosis and Barriers in Women’s Healthcare

While healthcare is an ever-progressing field, gender bias and racial discrimination continue to create barriers. These barriers can make it nearly impossible for people to receive the care they need. One such disease that is surrounded by these obstacles is endometriosis.  Endometriosis affects 1 in 10 people, and on average, it takes up to 11 years to be diagnosed (DotLab | Bringing You DotEndo for Endometriosis, n.d.-b). Currently, there is no cure, and the recommended diagnosis and treatment options are difficult to receive. 

Unveiling the Colonial Roots of Environmental Racism

In recent years, the world has witnessed an unprecedented surge in environmental awareness and action, bringing environmentalism to the forefront of global discourse. This growing movement has mobilized millions, particularly younger generations, to demand urgent measures to address climate change and environmental degradation. Through the power of social media and extensive media coverage, the call for climate action has inspired a new wave of eco-conscious activism. 

Listening to the Forest with Bioacoustics

Observing the health of ecosystems is important as it helps with species preservation, population monitoring, stress detection, and climate monitoring. In fact, “biodiversity loss is ranked as one of the top five global risks, both in impact and likelihood” (European Commission). Keeping an eye and or ear on an ecosystem over time can be hard for a person to do without any tools as there are many different sounds from animals coming from different directions, overlapping, etc. 

The Perversion of Thought-Crime: Historical Revisionism, Nationalism, and Religious Divide in the Indian Subcontinent

To many, the secession of the British Raj was a weight lifted off the shoulders of the residents of a newly independent subcontinent. The subjugation under English authority had long been considered entirely exhausted without the mutiny of its laborers laid out to dry under the same sun which baked the clay of their buildings. But the simmering warmth which once scorched the surface of the skin of India was beginning to emanate from underneath. Growing pressure surrounding the emergence of the Muslim bloc of Pakistan had already been faced with debates over its legitimacy, fueling the migration of 15 million across borders drawn by their former settlers. In a final attempt to secure authority in the Global North, the wardens of the Empire handed over their keys to what would soon become the new ruler of the South Asian psyche: separatism. As the dynamic between Pakistan and India continues to be barraged with statements of ‘conflict,’ ‘tensions,’ and ‘violence’ for the 77th year since their independence, the notion of peace has become increasingly difficult to conscribe, often by virtue of the difficulty of ascribing an antecedent dilemma. Responses from impassioned citizens will often give the impression that the archetypal Pandora’s box which has erupted into the social fabric of the diaspora today may very well be just that- an artifice constructed from the traumas of the Partition for those profiting and in charge. 

A Case for American Monarchy

Today, King Charles III of England has both a crown and a palace; however, he is far from the source of the nation's power. He and his family's assets are, above all else, the leading attraction of a nation whose economy relies heavily on tourism. Charles is a monarch only in name; he is far from the executive decision-maker. This has been the case in England for centuries; the Windsors are Kardashians with crowns who have no power over the nation's policy. If crowns and palaces do not make a monarch, what does? Power. 

A Beginner’s Guide to Theropods, Part 5: Plant-eating Meat-eating Dinosaurs

Early in the Cretaceous, a revolution was afoot. Not in the continents or climate but in the organisms themselves. To modern eyes, Jurassic floras would have looked like an odd mix of familiar ferns and conifers with tropical relicts like cycads and ginkgos. Most conspicuous would be the absence of any flowering plants: there were no broadleaf trees, no fruits or nuts, and no social insects to pollinate them (Benton). As these new plants spread with the continents (Gurung et al), there came an array of new herbivores, each specially adapted for feeding on them: first iguanodonts and ankylosaurs, later ceratopsians and hadrosaurs. And radiating out alongside them was an unprecedented diversity of theropods, including, for the first time, a wide range of non-predators (Zanno and Mackovicky). Where pencil-toothed diplodocids and narrow-mouthed stegosaurs had previously scraped pine needles and cropped cycads, there were now therizinosaurs munching leaves, oviraptorosaurs crushing seeds, and alvarezsaurs digging up ants.

The Wealth of U.S. Members of Congress: Laying the Foundation

I came across a video stating that one Congresswoman’s total net worth ballooned from a mere $300,000 to $40 million in just four years. I thought politicians made a humble amount of money until I dug deeper into how U.S. politicians become mysteriously filthy rich after working as U.S. officials. Why is this? That question has driven me to do the legwork and uncover surprising truths.

A Beginner’s Guide to Theropods, Part 4: TYRANNOSAURS!

The tyrannosaurids of the late Late Cretaceous were in a unique position. While earlier theropods had spread freely across the continents, tyrannosaurs lived in a world of fragmented continents and inland seaways. In Asia and western North America, where they were restricted, rising mountains and ebbing seaways formed a huge diversity of habitats, inhabited by a huge diversity of hadrosaurs and ceratopsians. For the first time in theropod history, there were not only no other giant apex predators, but the next biggest carnivorous dinosaurs - dromaeosaurs and troodontids - were over an order of magnitude smaller than they were (Holtz). This meant they were free to not only inherit the role of big-game hunters but, throughout their ontogeny, to maintain their ancestral roles as mid-sized, long-legged pursuers of small, fast animals. 

Technology, the Cause of Possible Mutilation and the Murder of Small Talk

In an era dominated by smartphones and constant connectivity, the art of small talk seems to be dwindling. With our attention constantly fixated on screens, interactions that once formed the fabric of social cohesion are now becoming obsolete. But could our dependence on technology be more than just a cultural shift? Could it actually be shaping our physical evolution? This article explores the intriguing hypothesis put forward by some researchers that our reliance on technology might lead to the evolution of a physical trait: a node at the back of our necks.

The Hedge Fund: Understanding a 5.1 Trillion US Dollar Industry

Alfred Winslow Jones — If you are keen on finance and the financial markets and do not know his name, you should. He is the grandfather of the modern-day financial titans known as hedge funds. The European-American sociologist/philanthropist from the mid-nineteenth century spent his youthful years running secret missions for an anti-Nazi group and drinking whiskey with Ernest Hemingway (Mallaby, 2010). The person who paved the way for an industry that controls an estimated $5.13 trillion would have likely spent his formative years working under financial moguls at places such as JP Morgan Chase or Merrill Lynch (Statista, 2023). It is logical to think that lacking a typical finance background would be a limitation; however, Jones used his unique background to his advantage. His years spent fighting Nazism and working undercover taught him how to be creative and escape boundaries, leading him to create the structure for arguably the most powerful and successful investment vehicles known today.