Filipinos are drowning not from rain, but from corruption. Billions meant to protect lives have vanished into fantom flood control systems that were never built, while entire communities are swallowed by rising waters. Behind every unbuilt wall and broken promise are politicians flaunting luxury as families lose everything. The water is rising. It’s time to fight back. Join our fight against corruption by signing this petition.
The bond between Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein intertwines wealth, power, and unresolved mysteries. We’ve glimpsed only scraps of the story, stitched together like a fragmented Frankenstein’s monster.
I'm a 29-year-old teacher facing scorching classrooms at 36°C+, amid a climate crisis where extreme heat disrupts 171 million students' learning yearly, erratic weather slashes food production, and rising temperatures exacerbate global insecurity. I pushed the principal for immediate fixes like better ventilation, but got called dramatic. Now I'm wondering, AITA for pushing this adaptation now when others think we can wait, or am I just looking out for students’ welfare while the climate is already shifting?
Hey BonJourno.com readers, I'm a 30F living with my partner Alex (32M) of 4 years in Seattle. Alex is addicted to social media. He spends 6+ hours daily posting, scrolling, and chasing likes. It’s ruined our relationship. Last week, I deleted his apps during an argument. AITA?
Hey BonJourno.com readers, I'm a 28F manager at a mid-sized tech firm in Silicon Valley. Last week, I recorded our boss and and shared it anonymously online. It went viral, and he got fired. AITA for busting him?
Dear Bonjourno.com readers, my neighbor keeps “borrowing” my Tesla charger to charge his vehicle while his is being repaired. He says the tariffs are holding up his purchase of a new device. I think this is akin to theft because I never told him it was okay. AITA?
It is tougher to put food on the table today, or to run a business, than any time in recent history. You are not alone. Based on recent polls, surveys, and online activism trends, the economy—particularly inflation, rising prices for food/essentials, and housing affordability—stands out as the issue making Americans most angry. It tops nearly every measure of public concern, with majorities expressing "high worry" or naming it the "most important problem." To combat this economic squeeze, we must join together...
In the streaming-fueled frenzy of 2025, where over 100 billion tracks pulse through platforms like Spotify, five titans—Taylor Swift, The Weeknd, Bad Bunny, Drake, and Billie Eilish—reign supreme, blending chart-crushing dominance with seismic cultural shifts.
Couch potatoes, beware: Netflix just crashed your binge session with a sneaky upgrade, starting this week, subscribers can battle it out in party games like Boggle Party, LEGO Party!, and sneaky social deduction showdowns like Party Crashers, all streamed straight to your smart TV with nothing but your phone as a controller. No consoles, no hassle, just pure living-room chaos designed to swap passive plot twists for friendship-testing fun, all while Netflix slyly hooks you deeper into their empire. Genius evolution or the ultimate screen-time saboteur?
“Corporations of Death” exposes how Mexican cartels have evolved from shadowy crime rings into full-blown corporate empires, complete with front companies, financial networks, and community “investments.” By laundering billions through banks, agriculture, and trade, they’ve blurred the line between business and brutality, mimicking the world’s most powerful corporations with chilling precision. The real question isn’t just who’s evil, but who’s complicit, the cartel kingpins, or the global systems that let them thrive under the guise of legitimacy.
In the dazzling world of social media, performative activism steals the show—think rainbow filters for clout or black squares that spark no change. From influencers to corporations, it's all flair, no fight, leaving real activists in the dust. But can these hollow gestures ever ignite real impact, or are they just ego-fueled stunts?
“The Devil’s Congressman” exposes how Pablo Escobar turned terror into a political playbook, blurring the line between criminal and congressman. From bombing planes to assassinating reformers and kidnapping journalists, he mastered fear as a strategy and violence as a policy. Yet beneath the bloodshed lies a haunting question: was Escobar the sole villain, or a product of a system that allowed corruption and chaos to thrive under its nose?
What happens when faith, firepower, and politics collide? “Guns, Guilt, and God” dives into Israel’s turbulent origins and its rise to modern power, tracing a story of holy promises, hidden deals, and moral gray zones that still shape global politics today.
“The Forgotten Classroom” exposes how the Trump administration’s gutting of the Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services turned a policy move into a moral crisis. By laying off nearly all staff overseeing protections for children with disabilities, the government effectively silenced the very watchdog meant to uphold their rights. Branded as “state empowerment,” the move feels more like abandonment, leaving families stranded and accountability erased. It asks the question no official wants to answer: Were they reformers, or just heartless bureaucrats in disguise?
“Villain Visionary” dares readers to imagine Elon Musk not as a tech savior but as a modern Bond villain with a moral blind spot the size of Mars. Through a darkly satirical lens, it explores how his empire, spanning Neuralink, Tesla, Starlink, and X—could morph into a machinery of control, surveillance, and manipulation if unchecked. Blurring the line between innovation and domination, the piece asks the question: is Musk the problem, or are we for letting his ambition outrun some accountability?
“Queens of Ruin” pulls back the curtain on the bloodstained empire of Griselda Blanco, who ruled the drug world not as an accessory but as an architect of fear. From ordering her husbands’ deaths to inventing new ways to kill and smuggle, Blanco turned survival into strategy and terror into legacy.
“Seductive Power” explores how history’s most infamous women, Cleopatra, Wu Zetian, and Wallis Simpson, turned allure into armor in a world that gave them few other weapons. Through calculated charm and cunning, they rose to rule empires, sway kings, and rewrite the rules of influence. Yet behind every whispered triumph lies the same haunting question: were they villains of manipulation or survivors of a system that demanded seduction as the price of power?
“Kingpin of Bytes” frames Kim Jong Un as the ultimate cybercrime boss, a ruler whose empire runs not just on fear, but on stolen code and crypto. From billion-dollar hacks and ransomware rampages to global identity scams, North Korea’s digital underworld mirrors a mafia with nuclear backing. Behind the propaganda and power, corruption is coded into the nation’s DNA.
The Philippines is located in the "Pacific Ring of Fire", making it one of the most seismically active countries in the world.
The Pacific Ring of Fire, a 40,000-kilometer horseshoe-shaped zone of intense seismic and volcanic activity, has long been a topic of fascination and speculation. Stretching from South America to Japan and New Zealand, this region is home to over 75% of the world's active volcanoes and experiences 90% of the planet's earthquakes. But is there more to this geological phenomenon than meets the eye?
Russia has officially withdrawn from its long-standing plutonium reduction pact with the U.S., the Plutonium Management and Disposition Agreement (PMDA), citing Washington’s “anti-Russian actions” and a disrupted strategic balance. The 2000 deal required both nations to safely dispose of 34 tonnes of weapons-grade plutonium each, enough for thousands of warheads. Moscow argues the U.S. violated the pact by changing how it disposed of plutonium, while critics warn the move undermines global nuclear stability and reignites Cold War-era tensions.
The UK has signed a $468 million missile deal with India, marking a deepening defense and trade partnership between the two nations. The agreement, finalized during Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s visit to India, will see British-made Lightweight Multirole Missiles supplied by Thales in Northern Ireland — securing 700 local jobs. While the UK touts this as a win for economic growth and global defense cooperation, critics see shades of political theater and strategic dependency. The deal, which also includes talks on future naval tech collaboration, raises the classic question: is this smart diplomacy or a slickly packaged arms hustle?
In his first major document, Dilexi Te (“I Have Loved You”), Pope Leo XIV boldly connects faith with love for migrants, urging Catholics to see compassion and justice as inseparable from belief. He calls for a Church that “builds bridges where walls are built,” warning that ignoring the poor and displaced turns faith into empty ritual.
Apple’s rumored iPhone 18 Fold might be getting a makeover worthy of a sci-fi prop, a hybrid titanium-and-aluminum frame. Analysts say it’s meant to balance strength and lightness, but fans are split: is Apple engineering brilliance, or overcomplicating another “folding miracle”? With Touch ID replacing Face ID and a tablet-sized screen packed inside, the debate’s heating up faster than an iPhone on launch day.
The year 2025 proved a reckoning for public figures whose scandals dominated headlines and shattered reputations. From federal indictments to massive fraud schemes, Grok says these individuals left the public asking: how could they?
