News
President Trump’s decision to destroy Iran’s nuclear program is being rightfully hailed as a dramatic success that ...
6dOpinion
The Daily Caller on MSNCharlamagne Can’t Wrap His Head Around Why GOP Wants To Cut Public Broadcasting, Foreign Aid
Radio host Charlamagne tha God said on Friday that he could not comprehend why Republicans passed a rescissions package ...
BAGHDAD — Drones targeted oil fields in Iraq’s semi-autonomous northern Kurdish region Wednesday, the latest in a series of ...
13don MSN
Kurdish separatist fighters in Iraq begin laying down weapons as part of peace process with Turkey
Fighters with a Kurdish separatist militant group that has waged a decades-long insurgency in Turkey have begun laying down their weapons in a symbolic ceremony Friday in northern Iraq, the first ...
14h
News-Medical.Net on MSNIbogaine treatment shows major breakthrough for veterans with brain injuries
Now, Stanford Medicine researchers have discovered that the plant-based psychoactive drug ibogaine, when combined with ...
17h
News-Medical.Net on MSNPenn State team investigates the neural basis of nightmares and mental health
Dreams, and likely nightmares, are experienced universally across humans and animals, but neuroscientists still do not know why.
2d
The Forward on MSNRabbi Neil Danzig, scholar who unlocked mysteries of the Talmud, dies at 74
The longtime Jewish Theological Seminary professor was an expert on the Babylonian rabbis and leaders known as Geonim.
A new Pew Research Center report reveals that about 22% of those who voted in the 2024 election and cast their ballot for President Donald Trump were Catholic.
A study revealed carnosic acid in herbs may help combat Alzheimer's by reducing inflammation and improving brain cell connections, but cooking with herbs alone won't provide benefits just yet.
Hue knew? Nearly one in five US packaged foods and drinks contain synthetic food dyes, according to a startling new study of 40,000 grocery items. The findings come amid a push by Health and Human ...
A study shows psilocybin from magic mushrooms can alleviate clinical depression for up to five years after one dose, proving more effective than traditional antidepressants. Doctors share caution.
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