Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Journal.
Legal Considerations for Digital Patient Services
Introduction As digital patient services—ranging from telehealth and remote monitoring to AI-driven diagnostics—become the standard of care in late 2025, the legal landscape has evolved to match this complexity. Providers can no longer rely on the "emergency flexibilities" seen in previous years. Today, digital healthcare is governed by a strict intersection of federal privacy laws, state-specific licensing, and emerging regulations around artificial intelligence. Navigating these legal waters requires a proactive approach to compliance that prioritizes patient safety and data integrity above all else.
By Abdul Mueedabout a month ago in Journal
Tragedy at Iredell County Airport: Multiple Dead After Plane Crash – What We Know About the Incident and the Greg Biffle Connection
A devastating plane crash at Statesville Regional Airport in Iredell County, North Carolina shook the community on Thursday morning, December 18, when a private business jet plunged to the ground in flames, resulting in multiple deaths, authorities confirmed. The accident has sparked intense public interest — especially because the aircraft is affiliated with retired NASCAR driver Greg Biffle — and investigators are now working to piece together what happened.
By Waqar Khanabout a month ago in Journal
How M&A Consultants Guide Energy Companies Through Sustainable Mergers and Acquisitions
Introduction to Sustainable M&A in the Energy Sector The energy industry is undergoing a profound metamorphosis driven by decarbonization imperatives, technological innovation, and shifting stakeholder expectations. Mergers and acquisitions have become a pivotal mechanism for companies seeking scale, diversification, or accelerated transition toward cleaner portfolios. Within this evolving landscape, sustainability is no longer a peripheral concern. It is a core determinant of deal viability, valuation integrity, and long-term competitiveness.
By Fida Hassainabout a month ago in Journal
Diplomatic tensions ease as Nigeria apologises for Burkina Faso military flight incident". AI-Generated.
Nigeria has issued a formal apology to Burkina Faso after an incident involving a military flight resulted in the detention of 11 Nigerian servicemen. The development has highlighted the delicate nature of regional military cooperation in West Africa, where cross-border operations against extremist groups are often necessary but fraught with logistical and political challenges.
By Fiaz Ahmed about a month ago in Journal
What I Noticed When Light Started Doing More Than Brightening a Room
For most of my life, light was something I turned on without thinking. If a room was bright enough to see clearly, the job was done. Light had one purpose and that was illumination. I never questioned whether it could do anything more.
By illumipureabout a month ago in Journal
Saudi Arabia Deports 24,000 Pakistani Beggars After Warning to Islamabad. AI-Generated.
In a sweeping move that has caught international attention, Saudi Arabia recently deported approximately 24,000 Pakistani nationals accused of begging on its streets. The decision, authorities say, follows repeated warnings issued to Islamabad over the growing number of Pakistani citizens involved in street solicitation in the kingdom. This large-scale deportation has sparked discussions about migrant labor policies, socio-economic challenges in Pakistan, and the treatment of expatriates in Gulf countries.
By Fiaz Ahmed about a month ago in Journal
Zelensky Gives Stark Warning as EU Leaders Start Crunch Talks on Russia's Frozen Assets. AI-Generated.
As Europe grapples with the economic fallout from Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has issued a stark warning ahead of critical discussions among European Union leaders on Russia’s frozen assets. The talks, set to shape the future of sanctions enforcement and post-war reconstruction funding, carry significant political and financial implications for both Ukraine and the EU.
By Fiaz Ahmed about a month ago in Journal
Russian Court Orders Raiffeisen to Pay €339 Million in Damages. AI-Generated.
In a significant development that could reverberate across global banking, a Russian court has ordered Raiffeisen Bank, Austria’s prominent banking institution, to pay €339 million in damages. The ruling, which comes amid heightened tensions between Russia and Western countries, underscores the growing legal and financial challenges faced by international banks operating in Russia.
By Fiaz Ahmed Brohiabout a month ago in Journal
The Kremlin’s Brazen Tactics: Russia’s Shadow Fleet Doubling as a Spy Asset, Intelligence Sources Say. AI-Generated.
In a development that has sent ripples through international intelligence communities, sources reveal that Russia’s so-called “shadow fleet” is serving a dual purpose: not only transporting sanctioned goods and circumventing Western restrictions but also acting as a covert intelligence-gathering tool. This revelation sheds light on the increasingly sophisticated and audacious strategies employed by Moscow in the context of global geopolitics and the ongoing conflict in Ukraine.
By Fiaz Ahmed Brohiabout a month ago in Journal
William Rush: The Forgotten Sculptor Who Shaped America’s First Artistic Identity. AI-Generated.
In the early years of the United States, when the nation was still searching for its cultural voice, one artist was already shaping it—quite literally. William Rush, often called the first professional sculptor in America, worked at a time when art was seen as a luxury and survival was the priority. Yet through wood, patience, and vision, Rush carved a foundation for American sculpture that still echoes today, even if his name has faded from popular memory.
By Ayesha Lashariabout a month ago in Journal
William Rush: The Forgotten Sculptor Who Shaped America’s First Artistic Identity
In the early years of the United States, when the nation was still searching for its cultural voice, one artist was already shaping it—quite literally. William Rush, often called the first professional sculptor in America, worked at a time when art was seen as a luxury and survival was the priority. Yet through wood, patience, and vision, Rush carved a foundation for American sculpture that still echoes today, even if his name has faded from popular memory.
By Ayesha Lashariabout a month ago in Journal
Why We Tweet Before Thinking and Why Deleting Later Does Not Erase the Echo
Social platforms reward speed. A thought appears, fingers move, and a sentence enters the public stream before reflection catches up. Twitter, now known as X, was built around immediacy, and that design still shapes behavior. Many users post first and think later, trusting that deletion can fix regret. Experience suggests otherwise. Even removed words tend to leave traces, emotional, social, and sometimes searchable.
By Ava Thornellabout a month ago in Journal










