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“We know Springfield is full of love. "It does not have the hate that is being told to the rest of the country."

Whenever prejudice and hate rear their ugly heads, support and love find a way to snuff them out.

Hundreds of Springfield residents have flooded Rose Goute Creole Restaurant, a Haitian-owned eatery, in an effort to show the Haitian population there that hate has no place in their town.

Rose Goute Creole opened in 2023, and manager Romane Pierre told the Springfield News-Sun what he's experienced in the wake of the falsehoods being spread about the Haitian community, which he said have come "as a shock."

Did you know that placebos work even when people know it's a placebo?

Real life is far stranger than fiction. And now we have the proof.

A recent thread online posed the question: "What sounds like pseudoscience, but actually isn't?

"The answers were far more interesting than all the science classes the average person takes. Combined. Let's take a look at some of the strangest scientific facts the good people of the Internet could come up with.

Her viral TikTok video shares brilliant tips on how to calm yourself during airplane turbulence.

Next time you’re on a flight and experience turbulence, remember this solid advice from 23-year-old Rhia Kerr. She is, after all, a flight attendant.

Kerr, a flight attendant for Irish carrier group Ryanair (according to the New York Post) went viral on TikTok after sharing how you can calm yourself during turbulence.

The key to raising independent kids? "Just be lazier."

Gen Xers and millennials experienced firsthand how damaging the often negligent parenting style of their boomer parents could be.

That, combined with the exhausting surplus of parenting information available nowadays (particularly then many, many way in which you could secretly be SETTING YOUR KID UP FOR FAILURE) and it’s no wonder why so many modern day parents feel the need be hypervigilant in protecting their kids.

But this well-meaning intention easily turns into helicopter parenting, which also doesn’t truly help kids out in the long run—and it doesn’t feel great for parents, either.

Which is what prompted Leah Ova, a WFH mom of four, to make a now-viral video advocating for a bit more of what she calls “lazy parenting.”