Think you’re better than the average poker player?
It’s time to find out.
Take the Poker IQ Test and discover:
How sharp your decisions really are
Where your biggest leaks are
How you compare against other players
Only 10 minutes.
No excuses. 👀
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Think you’re better than the average poker player?
It’s time to find out.
Take the Poker IQ Test and discover:
How sharp your decisions really are
Where your biggest leaks are
How you compare against other players
Only 10 minutes.
No excuses. 👀
Show more
There were only 4 of us, Republicans, that signed the discharge petition to force the vote to release the Epstein files.
Thomas Massie, Nancy Mace, Lauren Boebert, and myself.
Trump has come after us one by one ever since then.
The President told Speaker Johnson not to allow the vote to happen, but we courageously went against the President and refused to budge and overrode the Speaker to force the vote on record.
It was only when all Members of Congress had to vote on record did Republicans finally find their intestinal fortitude to do the right thing and vote YES to release the files.
Until then, they were absurdly obedient to the President who was doing everything in his reign of terror to hold them back.
Even now, all the files are still not released, and the Epstein class remains protected.
Wars are being waged, the markets are being manipulated, and the average American is being driven further into ruin while the Epstein class reigns and has yet to face any accountability.
I will never regret signing that discharge petition, refusing to back down, and resigning as I want nothing to do with a President and a Party that bows to the Epstein class.
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Forget killing cancer cells. South Korea just figured out how to talk them back into being normal.
Scientists at KAIST in Daejeon have done something the world has been chasing for decades.
They found a molecular switch that flips cancer cells back into healthy cells.
No chemo. No radiation. No destroying anything.
Just… reversal.
Professor Kwang-Hyun Cho and his team caught cancer in the act. That tiny window where a normal cell is on the edge of turning malignant but hasn't fully crossed over yet. They call it the "critical transition" — the same kind of jump that happens when water hits 100°C and becomes steam.
In that split-second window, the cell is unstable. Normal and cancerous at the same time.
And that's exactly where they hit the switch.
In colon cancer trials, they targeted three master genes — MYB, HDAC2, and FOXA2 — and the cancer cells didn't die.
They went back to being healthy intestinal cells. Like nothing ever happened.
The team built a digital twin of the gene network to map every move a cell makes on its way to becoming cancerous. Then they reverse-engineered the path home.
Their paper landed in Advanced Science, published by Wiley.
It's still early. Lab trials and mice. Human treatment is years away.
But the idea of curing cancer without killing a single cell is no longer science fiction.
Source: KAIST (Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology), published in Advanced Science journal
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This red-tailed hawk was found sitting on top of a door at the glass-fronted entrance to an apartment building in Brooklyn. His behavior and poor feather quality indicated something was very wrong.
A kind rescuer brought him to us, and our exams revealed a host of issues for this poor bird: severe dehydration and signs of anemia, which probably indicates some rodenticide poisoning. He also has an old wound on one toe that was obviously causing him pain. We also found a lot of intestinal parasites. And finally, he somehow got coated in a greasy substance. Poor buddy!
After a few days of supportive care, medications and wound care, this hawk, named Quan, is standing and more alert. We hope he’ll soon be stable enough for us to clean those beautiful feathers under anesthesia.
📷: Rachel Frank, Eugene Oda
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A Journey from Rock Bottom to Triumph with
Two years ago, I hit rock bottom. I was unemployed, overwhelmed with doubt, and struggling to see a future for myself. I felt like the world had given up on me, and I almost gave up on myself.
One evening, while browsing aimlessly online, I came across I didn’t think much of it at first, but I decided to take their IQ test—just for a bit of distraction. Little did I know, that simple decision would change my life.
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