Author: Errica Jensen

Errica Jensen is the Senior Editor at Creative Learning Guild, where she leads editorial coverage of legal news, landmark lawsuits, class action settlements, and consumer rights developments and News across the United Kingdom, United States and beyond. With a career spanning over a decade at the intersection of legal journalism, lawsuits, settlements and educational publishing, Errica brings both rigorous research discipline, in-depth knowledge, experience and an accessible editorial voice to subjects that most readers find interesting and helpful.

Sheila Irvine starts her mornings with calm urgency. She rushes through her tasks, not because she dreads them, but because something far more interesting awaits—her unique glasses. Once they’re on, she sees letters. Not blurred. Not shadows. Letters. That simple transformation—of symbols becoming readable—was previously inconceivable for someone diagnosed with geographic atrophy, the advanced form of dry age-related macular degeneration. Yet, within a humble operating theatre at Moorfields Eye Hospital in London, a chip the size of a SIM card has started a quiet revolution in how we understand blindness, and more significantly, how we might reverse it. The treatment…

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The initial lab image didn’t appear to be a miracle. It appeared to be a small red dot hidden deep within an aged cell’s nucleus. But to researchers at Harvard Medical School, it signaled something potentially transformative—the re-centering of youth at the heart of biological time. For many years, aging was viewed as unavoidable and unchanging, much like gravity. But Harvard’s aging researchers, under the direction of Dr. David Sinclair, are now challenging one of biology’s most fundamental constraints by concentrating on what causes the decline rather than just the obvious signs. Their most recent work comprises six chemical mixtures…

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It started, quite honestly, as a dare—ending my hot shower with a full, chilly blast. A inquisitive voice in my thoughts pondered if it could actually make a difference. Within minutes, I felt more alert than caffeine ever managed. By midday, something about my energy felt… sharper. That bracing, instinctive gasp under icy water is more than simply a sensory jolt—it’s a signal to your body that change is necessary quickly. Cold water forces the release of norepinephrine, a surprisingly powerful chemical messenger that narrows blood vessels, raises awareness, and—most interestingly—activates brown fat. This type of fat burns calories instead…

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The initial indications weren’t explosive. They were subtle, unassuming records being discreetly broken off Florida’s coast in 2023. Ocean temperatures went past 37°C—levels more frequent in spas than saltwater. It looked weird, but it didn’t feel like an emergency. Not quite yet. Then Idalia hit. A storm that seemed to take power from an invisible source below, gaining strength remarkably quickly. Driven by an ocean heat mass that had been subtly developing for months, it changed from tropical trouble to hurricane threat in less than a day. This isn’t a surface-level phenomenon. The Atlantic’s warm zone now spreads far below…

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They don’t burn their passports. They merely upgrade their selections. Over the past decade, especially after 2020, there’s been a quiet but dramatic trend among top earners and global entrepreneurs—away from static, citizenship-based taxation and toward something strikingly more fluid. They’re choosing mobility over allegiance, optimization over tradition. In the context of U.S. tax law, the motive is particularly evident. The United States remains one of the very few governments that taxes based on citizenship, not residency. Even if a person lives abroad, every dollar earned—whether from dividends in Dubai or property profits in Prague—is still susceptible to IRS examination.…

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There was something especially silent about the plastic bag dispensers at Ang Mo Supermarket this week. The same familiar placards were still pasted beside the checkout counters. Five cents a bag. Nothing appeared different, and yet, everything technically was. After deregistering from Singapore’s official plastic bag charge scheme at the end of 2025, Ang Mo and its smaller counterpart Hao Mart were no longer compelled to collect that five-cent fee. The move wasn’t political or rebellious—it was procedural. For three straight years, neither chain has met the S$100 million income barrier imposed by the National Environment Agency. That pushed them…

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Flames danced behind the stall like a signal flare for those who knew. At Blackgoat, tucked into a humble corner of Jalan Batu Market, the fragrance of slow-charred meat blended with the sizzle of ambition. The queue told the story. constantly long, constantly waiting, always worth it. From its start in early 2023, Blackgoat didn’t behave like most hawker stalls. It didn’t display menus on signboards or offer laminated photos. Instead, it treated its Instagram like a blackboard, scratching out the week’s creations, then letting the flames do the talking. And the flames, definitely, had a voice. Fikri Rohaimi, just…

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Lesley Groff is not a well-known figure. But for nearly two decades, she was a highly trusted point of contact in one of the most notorious private networks in recent American history. She wasn’t a celebrity associate, a financial partner, or an accused abuser. She was the helper. However, the consequences of her actions and inactions are still coming to light in layers. She worked for Jeffrey Epstein, mostly from his New York office, commonly described as his operational nerve center. While he went between Palm Beach, Manhattan, Paris, and his island in the Caribbean, Groff kept the daily logistics…

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Certain prisons are designed to mechanically neutralize disruption, functioning as self-contained machines. Ebongweni, located just outside Kokstad, is startlingly comparable in this regard—designed with layers of technology, routine, and architectural force to contain South Africa’s most problematic offenders. Since its inception in 2002, it has come to symbolize what the state believes necessary when all other correctional choices begin to fray. By keeping the jail purposefully under capacity, the Department of Correctional Services maintains a carefully regulated atmosphere. Unlike overloaded metropolitan institutions, Ebongweni doesn’t work under stress—it absorbs it. A control-oriented philosophy is reflected in the structure itself. Everything is…

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There are ambassadors whose presence becomes a flashpoint, and there are those who handle tension with subtle accuracy. Ariel Seidman, Israel’s top envoy to South Africa, found himself at the center of a diplomatic breach that unfurled with startling speed and unashamed clarity. In late January 2026, South Africa gave him 72 hours to leave the country. The official language was undeniably sharp. The foreign ministry of South Africa said that Seidman had used official Israeli social media platforms to wage “insulting attacks” against President Cyril Ramaphosa. Additionally, he was accused of entertaining senior Israeli officials and coordinating contacts with…

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