Ear pinch clears away brain fog in 8 seconds

Stanford University neuroscientists identified a nasty “cell invader.” It attacks cells in the memory center of your brain - the hippocampus - causing your brain to shrink.

Thankfully there’s something you can do from home to clear it out.Vance Claims Minneapolis Protester Was Part of Organized Left-Wing Network

This Brain Clearance process is critical for flushing out toxic invaders from your hippocampus.

The 17,789 Americans who’ve tried this report improved memory and boosted brain power.

This is a totally new way to address the root cause of brain fog, fuzzy thinking, and depleted brain power…and you can do it from home without any pills or exercise.

(The secret is in your ears.)

Check it out while you still can.

Try this 8-second ear trick for better memory (backed by 5 scientific studies).

FBI can't examine devices it took from Washington Post reporter for now, judge rules

A federal judge has barred the FBI from examining the electronic devices its agents seized last week from the Virginia home of a Washington Post reporter until he can review the controversial case.

“The government must preserve but must not review any of the materials that law enforcement seized pursuant to search warrants the Court issued," U.S. Magistrate Judge William B. Porter wrote in a two-page ruling filed Wednesday in federal district court for the Eastern District of Virginia.

Supreme Court seems inclined to keep Lisa Cook on Fed board despite Trump attempt to fire her

The Supreme Court on Wednesday seemed inclined to keep Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook in her job, casting doubt on President Donald Trump’s bid to wrest control of the nation’s central bank.

The justices heard arguments over Trump’s effort to fire Cook based on allegations she committed mortgage fraud, which she denies. No president has fired a sitting governor in the 112-year history of the Fed, which was structured to be independent of day-to-day politics. The case presented the court with one of the more extraordinary efforts by Trump to expand presidential power. Though the court has frequently sided with him on emergency petitions, Cook’s case could prove to be an exception.

American Sports & Culture

American Business & Markets

Keep Reading