Sign indicating availability for hire and indicating that more are open in the job market.

The State of the Job Market in 2025: A Look Back

In 2025, millions of workers experienced instability not because companies were failing, but because corporations were reorganizing around scale, automation, shareholder demands, and mergers. Layoffs were not isolated accidents or cyclical miscalculations. They were part of a larger economic realignment driven by consolidation, monopoly power, and financial engineering.

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Pixelated video game shows a game over screen display, is it over for the video game industry

Why the Video Game Industry Feels Like It’s in Decline

For years, the video game industry was treated as one of the few “unstoppable” sectors of the global economy. Even when other industries slowed, gaming continued to grow. More players, more revenue, more studios, more investment. By the early 2020s, video games were bigger than film and music combined. So why does the industry now…

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Who Really Shapes Policy? The Top Lobbying Spenders of 2025 and the Power Behind Them

Lobbying is often discussed as a background feature of American politics—something abstract, technical, or inevitable. But in practice, lobbying is one of the clearest ways to see whose interests have the most consistent access to lawmakers, regulators, and the policy-writing process itself. Money does not guarantee outcomes, but it determines proximity: who gets meetings, who…

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A clear glass jar filled with coins topped by a small growing plant, symbolizing wealth accumulation and growth.

Why the Wealthy Must Be Mentally Healthier — and Why It Matters to Us All

Mental illness is not limited to poverty. People experiencing financial insecurity face intense, chronic stress from unmet survival and safety needs — and that has predictable, damaging effects on mental health. But abundance isn’t a cure: the wealthy can be mentally unwell in ways that are less visible but no less consequential.

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