Nonfiction
American Job Market 2025: Stability Amid Emerging Challenges
As we move further into 2025, the American job market reflects a period of transition marked by resilience, innovation, and emerging challenges. The landscape is shaped by technological advancements, evolving work models, shifting economic policies, and changing workforce expectations. While some industries are booming with opportunity, others are adjusting to automation, global competition, and structural changes in the economy.
By Md.Nayeemul Islam Khan10 months ago in Critique
Weak Hero Class 2 Review: You Thought Season 1 Was Intense? Think Again!
So finally, I have completed watching Season 2 of Weak Hero, and I think in April, it was the most anticipated Korean drama series which many people wanted to watch, but on the day this series was released, multiple movies were released, like Havoc, Until Dawn, The Accountant 2 and many more.
By Ayush Verma10 months ago in Critique
Unpacking White Lotus Season 3: Gorgeous Scenes and Frustratingly Familiar Tropes
For the last eight weeks, my morning routine has been to get up, make coffee, and mentally get ready for the upcoming episode of HBO's The White Lotus. It has evolved into a weekly immersion in opulence, dysfunction, and mortality rather than merely a viewing experience. I was optimistic, high, caftan-clad, sun-kissed aspirations about the upcoming show.
By Hridya Sharma10 months ago in Critique
Measuring Civilization: A Dialogue Between Modern Ideals and Tribal Traditions
Introduction: What Truly Defines Progress? Civilization is often measured through progress—technological, intellectual, moral. But what exactly does progress look like? Is it modern infrastructure and access to education, or a community that protects honor, loyalty, and social bonds?
By Numan Shah10 months ago in Critique
5 Shocking Insights on the Supreme Court Deportation Decision
The Supreme Court deportation decision on Texas's controversial deportation of immigrants has created much discussion. A stay of execution was granted to that ruling under the Alien Enemies Act, a law passed in 1798 allowing the government to deport aliens at war, but mainly collecting dust. This was an outcome of charges from several immigrants who have alleged that their removal was not warranted under the last administration. The ruling thus opens questions about individuals' rights toward national security interests.
By Dunia Zakaria10 months ago in Critique
Why is the iPhone so popular all over the world?
Year after year, Apple Inc., one of the most valuable tech companies in the world, maintains its dominance in the smartphone market. Apple iPhones continue to top customer wish lists despite the market's plethora of competitors, and with good reason. However, what precisely makes Apple phones so popular, and why do they frequently cause internet rushes and long lines with each new release?
By jakir hossain10 months ago in Critique
Capitalism in Intensive Care: Notes from a World Too Busy Buying Itself
The global economy today sits like an aging monarch in a glass ICU, draped in silk hospital gowns woven from speculation and denial. Tubes of liquidity drip-feed borrowed time into a system allergic to introspection, while its caretakers—central banks, financial institutions, and think tanks—applaud the twitching of GDP as if it were a sign of vitality rather than convulsion. The prognosis? Complicated. The diagnosis? A civilization obsessed with consumption, terminally ill with its own success.
By Andra Hikmal10 months ago in Critique









