interview
Interviews with lovers, fighters and the various professionals who deal with our dysfunction.
Bianca Bulgaru, Reporting From Kyiv Under Fire: Civilian Life, Drones, and Propaganda
Bianca Bulgaru is a Romanian journalist and Kyiv-based correspondent for Beta News Romania. Reporting from cities including Kyiv, Kharkiv, and Sumy, she focuses on how civilians adapt to air raids, infrastructure strikes, and the long psychological aftershocks of living under threat. She also tracks the parallel war over narrative: propaganda that inflates fringe extremists into state-defining myths, and the language politics that can turn a reporting choice into an accusation. Scott Douglas Jacobsen spoke with Bulgaru about habituation to danger, the ethics of witnessing, and why transparency matters for sustaining Romanian support for Ukraine.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsenabout 14 hours ago in Humans
Why Bother With The Degree?. Top Story - February 2026.
“So, as you can see from my resume, I’ve just completed my degree in Accounting and Finance. I worked part-time alongside it for three years, kept my position at work throughout, and was even a student ambassador during my third year-”
By Maddy Haywoodabout 21 hours ago in Humans
Falling Between Every System
Modern social systems are often described as safety nets. Employment law protects workers. Healthcare programs provide treatment. Disability benefits replace lost income. Unemployment insurance bridges job loss. Each system is presented as a safeguard designed to catch people when life disrupts their ability to function normally. Yet for many people living with disability, chronic illness, or injury, the lived experience is the opposite. Rather than forming a net, these systems stack vertically, each with its own eligibility rules, thresholds, and assumptions. Instead of catching the fall, they create gaps. People do not slip through because they failed to try. They fall because the systems were never designed to align.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast2 days ago in Humans
Two Party System
For anyone who doesn't know, I live in Canada. I live in the so called bible belt capital, the most conservative province-Alberta. Canada for the last decade has had a liberal federal government which I attribute to many current failures. However, lately politics is choosing the lesser of the two evils. In the States for example, you have the Democrats and the Republicans. I think anyone is well aware that President Trump is failing his people. He has a cult following and while his first term may have had some promise, he has turned a corner and seems to be acting on impulse and polarizing the country.
By Sid Aaron Hirji2 days ago in Humans
Roots and Fruit
Roots and Fruit Photo by Lukáš Kulla on Unsplash Most people evaluate life by what shows. Results, behavior, success, failure, growth, collapse. Fruit is easier to measure than roots, so it becomes the focus almost by default. When something goes wrong, attention rushes to what is visible and immediate. When something goes right, credit is assigned to the most recent action. But this way of seeing consistently misreads causality. Fruit is never the beginning of the story. It is the result of something that has been growing quietly, often unnoticed, for a long time.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast8 days ago in Humans
Anderson Cooper: Grief, Truth, and a Life on Air
Some journalists report the news. Others carry it in their voices long after the camera turns off. Anderson Cooper belongs to the second group. For decades, he has appeared on screens during wars, disasters, elections, and moments of national grief. His calm tone often hides the emotional weight behind the stories he tells. Viewers trust him not because he is loud, but because he listens. There is something steady about the way Anderson Cooper speaks, especially when the world feels uncertain. Yet behind the anchor desk is a man shaped by personal loss, complicated family history, and a deep search for meaning. To understand Anderson Cooper fully, we have to look beyond headlines and into the life that shaped him.
By Muqadas khan11 days ago in Humans
What the System Forces You to Become
The Question the System Replaces By the time a person has passed through employment law, healthcare coverage rules, unemployment insurance, disability determination, and benefit eligibility, the relevant question has already shifted without ever being stated out loud. It is no longer whether the system helped or failed them. It is whether they managed to remain legible long enough to survive it. Each institutional layer imposes requirements that appear reasonable when viewed in isolation, yet become coercive when experienced sequentially:
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast17 days ago in Humans
Blake Garrett: Searching for Meaning Behind a Familiar Name
Some names echo softly but stay with us. You hear them once, maybe twice, and later they return in a quiet moment of recognition. Blake Garrett is one of those names. People search it not always knowing why. Sometimes it feels connected to a memory, a headline, a face, or a story that never fully settled. This kind of curiosity is deeply human. We look for clarity, for connection, for context. This article explores why the name Blake Garrett draws attention, how shared names live complicated lives online, and what it means when a name becomes searchable without belonging to just one clear story.
By Muqadas khan18 days ago in Humans







