Groundbreaking clinical trial results show semaglutide can halt and reverse fatty liver disease, but access and cost pose looming hurdles.
Author: Democratically
Martin Scorsese’s new documentary, featuring the late Pope Francis, uses global youth filmmaking to bridge cultural divides and honor creativity as a force for unity.
Senator Lindsey Graham’s push for ‘bone-crushing’ Russia sanctions has rallied rare bipartisan support—but experts warn of dramatic economic fallout and question whether these measures will deliver real progress for Ukraine.
Amazon’s $4 billion expansion into rural delivery brings jobs and faster shipping, but critics warn it could deepen reliance on Big Tech and threaten local businesses.
The $425M upgrade to Kuwait’s air defenses highlights a growing U.S. security commitment in the Gulf—even as critics question who truly benefits from such deals.
Investigators unraveled an online alliance between a Florida man and a Wisconsin teen shooter, exposing hate-driven plots and the dangers of unchecked extremism.
Short sellers post record $159B profits in days after Trump’s tariffs, but the fallout extends far beyond Wall Street into American homes.
By dropping criminal charges and expediting deportation, the Justice Department puts due process—and human rights—on the line in the case of an alleged MS-13 leader. The facts behind the headlines reveal troubling tradeoffs.
Missing electronic records stymied the high-profile investigation into Wisconsin’s Supreme Court abortion draft leak, raising urgent questions about credibility and security.
New Hampshire’s new ICE partnership empowers troopers to enforce immigration law—a move critics warn will erode community trust and risk civil rights, while supporters tout public safety gains. Who really benefits?