April 14, 2026
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Jabapost > 2025 > December

Inside America’s Quiet Infrastructure Crisis and Why Failures Are Rising Nationwide

Inside America’s Quiet Infrastructure Crisis America’s infrastructure rarely dominates headlines until it fails. A bridge collapse, a water contamination alert, a widespread power outage. Each incident is treated as isolated, unexpected, and temporary. But taken together, these failures point to a deeper, growing national problem that Washington acknowledges in theory but struggles to confront in […]

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How Local Elections Are Quietly Shaping National Policy

National politics dominate cable news and social media feeds, but many of the most consequential policy decisions in the United States are being shaped far from Washington. Quietly, and often with little public attention, local elections are reshaping national policy from the ground up: school boards, county sheriffs, city councils, and state legislatures are shaping […]

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Why U.S. Voters Should Care About What’s Happening in The Middle East Right Now

Most Americans don’t wake up thinking about the Middle East. They’re thinking about rent, groceries, healthcare, jobs, and whether the country feels stable. That’s normal. But global events have a way of reaching U.S. households faster than people expect through gas prices, inflation, cyber threats, military risk, migration pressures, and supply chain disruptions. What’s happening […]

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The New Cold War: Who’s Actually Winning?

The phrase “Cold War” has returned to public conversation, but this time the conflict looks different. There are no iron curtains or daily nuclear standoffs on television screens. Instead, the competition plays out quietly through trade rules, technology standards, supply chains, military positioning, and influence over smaller nations. The United States, China, and Russia are […]

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Global Inflation Isn’t Over. Here’s Why

Inflation may have faded from the top of the news cycle, but the forces behind it have not disappeared. What has changed is the nature of inflation itself. Instead of a sharp, demand-driven surge, the global economy is now dealing with slower, persistent pressures that keep prices elevated. For U.S. consumers, that distinction matters: inflation […]

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The Countries Quietly Preparing for the Next Global Crisis

Global crises are no longer rare disruptions; they are becoming a permanent feature of the international system. Pandemics, wars, climate shocks, cyberattacks, and supply-chain breakdowns now overlap in ways that compound risk. While many governments still respond after damage is done, a smaller group of countries is preparing in advance, quietly restructuring their economies to […]

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How Climate Migration Will Reshape the World and the U.S.

Climate change is no longer just an environmental issue; it is becoming one of the most powerful drivers of human movement in the modern era. Rising temperatures, prolonged droughts, flooding, and extreme weather are steadily reshaping where people can live, work, and survive. Unlike traditional migration driven solely by war or economics, climate migration is […]

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America Doesn’t Have a Talent Shortage, It Has a Trust Problem

For years, American employers have warned of a “talent shortage.” Job openings remain high, positions stay unfilled, and companies complain they can’t find qualified candidates. At the same time, millions of Americans are underemployed, working outside their fields, or locked out of opportunities despite their experience and capabilities. These two realities don’t contradict each other; […]

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Why “Return to Office” Is the Wrong Debate

The debate over “return to office” policies has become one of the loudest workplace conflicts of the post-pandemic era. Companies argue that in-person work restores productivity and culture, while employees push back in defense of flexibility and work-life balance. But this framing is fundamentally flawed. The real issue is not where people work; it is […]

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