Humanity
Humanity
New Georgia School Zone Safety Laws
According to the National Safety Council, school bus-related accidents killed 128 people in 2023, with most school bus related deaths being passengers of other vehicles. Due to cars going high speeds or not stopping when a school bus’s stop sign is showing, Georgia implemented stronger protections to keep their school zones safe for children and other drivers.
By Caren Sainz3 months ago in FYI
The Silence After Trying
The silence didn’t arrive suddenly. It came slowly, like dust settling after a room has been emptied. At first, there were noises—emails opening, notifications buzzing, the familiar hum of effort. Messages sent. Applications submitted. Conversations started with careful optimism. There was movement, and movement felt like progress.
By Talha khan3 months ago in FYI
A Failed Artist, A Disillusioned Poet, An Underpaid Game Show Host. Top Story - January 2026.
I took my son and niece to Gori, a small town in Georgia where Joseph Stalin was born. They talked me into visiting the Stalin's Museum, the largest in the post-Soviet space. I had resisted going there because I just can't stand the monster and know enough about him, or so I thought.
By Lana V Lynx3 months ago in FYI
The Philosophy of a Tyrant
The tyrant is not merely a villain of history books or a caricatured despot shouting orders from a throne. He is, more disturbingly, a philosopher in action—one whose ideas are etched not on paper but on people. Tyranny is sustained not only by weapons and fear, but by a coherent, if deeply flawed, worldview. To understand tyranny is to confront a philosophy that values power over truth, order over justice, and control over meaning.
By Fred Bradford3 months ago in FYI
Why Police Officers Are Called Cops
The Word “Cop” If you have talked to anyone who has dealt with the police, you have probably heard them use the word “cop” instead of “policeman” or “police officer.” The word is used so often these days that everyone knows who a cop refers to.
By Margaret Minnicks3 months ago in FYI
The Eiffel Tower Was Hated at First
It's difficult to think of a more iconic building than the Eiffel Tower in Paris. It's an iconic landmark and is considered the second most recognisable building and landmark on the planet, only being beaten by the Statue of Liberty in New York. It's hard to imagine that what is today considered a symbol of Paris and romance was once hated. The Parisians would call it the "iron monster" and a "tragic giant lamppost," with writers and artists warning that building the tower would ruin the skyline and humiliate all the other monuments of Paris.
By Dave's Your Uncle!3 months ago in FYI
Three Ways To Test Your Faith
Most people can quote verbatim the definition of faith found in Hebrews 11:1. However, not all of them live by that definition. Yes, “faith is the substance of things hoped for and is the evidence of things not seen,” but when the going gets tough, some people tend to forget what the Bible says about faith.
By Margaret Minnicks3 months ago in FYI
Ground Beef Recalled: Fear, Trust, and the Food on Our Tables
The words ground beef recalled carry a quiet panic. They appear on screens late at night, during grocery runs, or after dinner is already cooking. Food is intimate. It enters our bodies. It feeds our children. When something so ordinary becomes a risk, it shakes trust in ways people do not expect. A recall is not just a notice. It is a moment of doubt. Did I buy this? Did I already eat it? Is my family safe? This article looks closely at why ground beef recalls happen, how they affect everyday life, and what they reveal about the fragile relationship between people and the systems that feed them. This is not about alarm. It is about awareness, care, and responsibility.
By Muqadas khan3 months ago in FYI










