Author: Imrul Hasan

This is Imrul Hasan's profile, and this is a bit of copy about him. He grew up in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Imrul is a Wordpress developer, Linux Server Expert, Software Tester, Blogger, and Cyclist. He’s known for his love of cats, but is also crazy about movies, dogs, coffee, sea and mountains.
Debunking the Plum Island Lyme Disease Theory: Why Science Rejects the Lab-Origin Claim
Science, World

Debunking the Plum Island Lyme Disease Theory: Why Science Rejects the Lab-Origin Claim

For decades, the idea that Lyme disease emerged from a laboratory accident at Plum Island’s Lab 257 has circulated through books, late-night radio shows, documentaries, and speculative journalism. The theory is compelling on the surface: a mysterious disease appears near a government research facility conducting secretive tick experiments. But compelling does not mean correct. When subjected to rigorous scientific scrutiny, the Plum Island hypothesis begins to collapse under the weight of established biology, documented history, genetic evidence, and epidemiological patterns that predate modern laboratories by thousands of years. The scientific consensus is unequivocal: Lyme disease did not originate from Plum Island, nor from any modern human laboratory. Instead, Lyme disease is an ancie...
The Lyme Disease Mystery: Untangling the Controversial Link to Plum Island and Lab 257
Mystery

The Lyme Disease Mystery: Untangling the Controversial Link to Plum Island and Lab 257

For nearly half a century, one unsettling question has lingered in the minds of scientists, journalists, and residents across the Northeast: Did Lyme disease—the most widespread vector-borne illness in America—begin as an accidental release from Plum Island’s Lab 257? The official narrative has always insisted that Lyme disease emerged naturally, spreading quietly from ticks and deer in the forests of Connecticut. But the coincidence of locations, timelines, and classified research has kept suspicion alive. As investigations into Plum Island’s activities have become more transparent, a disturbing pattern has emerged—one that suggests the origins of Lyme disease may be far more complicated than the public has been led to believe. The first recognized cluster of Lyme disease cases appeared ...
Inside Plum Island: The Dark Legacy of Lab 257 and America’s Most Controversial Bio-Research Facility
Mystery

Inside Plum Island: The Dark Legacy of Lab 257 and America’s Most Controversial Bio-Research Facility

For decades, the small, windswept landmass known as Plum Island—a 3-mile stretch of restricted federal territory off the coast of Long Island—has been at the center of some of the most unsettling rumors in American scientific history. On maps it appears unremarkable, a quiet island shaped like a teardrop. To residents of nearby towns, it is simply a distant silhouette seen from the shore. But to researchers, journalists, and government analysts who have spent years tracking its operations, Plum Island’s Lab 257 represents one of the most enigmatic and controversial biological research facilities ever operated by the United States. The official story is that Plum Island existed solely for studying animal diseases, particularly those that threaten livestock. For decades, this explanation he...
Travis Taylor Reveals Mars: The Terrifying Truth Lurking Beneath the Red Planet’s Silence
Science

Travis Taylor Reveals Mars: The Terrifying Truth Lurking Beneath the Red Planet’s Silence

For decades, Mars has been framed as humanity’s next frontier—a dusty, barren world waiting to be explored, colonized, and studied. The public was taught a comfortable, harmless narrative: Mars is dead, empty, and quiet, a graveyard of rock and rust untouched by life. But according to Dr. Travis Taylor—astrophysicist, aerospace engineer, military scientist, and one of the most outspoken scientific voices in America—that narrative was never accurate. In interview after interview, analysis after analysis, and research spanning his government work, aerospace consulting, and involvement in classified studies, Taylor has been dropping hints that Mars is far stranger, far more unsettling, and far more scientifically active than the public has been allowed to believe. His claims are not the rambl...
The Dark Backstory of Snow White: The Nightmare Fairy Tale Was Never Meant for Children
Myths

The Dark Backstory of Snow White: The Nightmare Fairy Tale Was Never Meant for Children

The version of Snow White most people know — a sweet girl, a jealous queen, a poisoned apple, and a kiss of true love — is the sanitized Disney myth, polished until it shines like glass.But the original story?It was never innocent.It was never gentle.And it definitely wasn’t meant for children. The earliest versions of Snow White, especially the 1812 Grimm Brothers tale, reveal a haunting undercurrent of violence, jealousy, and grotesque punishment. Even deeper, scholars believe the legend may be based on real historical figures whose lives were marked by political cruelty, abuse, and death. Snow White was never a princess in danger.She was a girl caught in the brutality of adulthood — a mirror reflecting the darkest corners of the human psyche. Snow White’s “mother” wasn’t orig...
The Ainu: Japan’s Dark Secret and the Forgotten Indigenous Nation
History

The Ainu: Japan’s Dark Secret and the Forgotten Indigenous Nation

Japan is often imagined as a country of harmony, homogeneity, and seamless cultural continuity. But beneath the polished narrative of one people, one culture, and one identity lies a buried history — a history Japan rarely confronts openly.It is the story of the Ainu, an indigenous people whose existence predates the formation of the Japanese state, yet whose identity was systematically erased, rewritten, or forced underground for centuries. To speak of the Ainu is to unearth a part of Japan that the world — and often Japan itself — barely knows. It is a story of dispossession, colonization, cultural survival, and a hidden battle for recognition that continues today. This is not a footnote in Japanese history.It is one of its darkest secrets. Who Are the Ainu? The People Japan F...
A Letter From a Man Who Never Asked for Help
Fiction

A Letter From a Man Who Never Asked for Help

I don’t know how to start this, so I’ll start with the truth. I am tired. Not the kind of tired that sleep fixes — the kind that sits inside your bones, inside your heart, inside the parts of you nobody sees. The kind of tired that comes from pretending for so long that even you don’t remember what honesty feels like. I have spent my whole life being “the strong one.” The reliable one. The calm one. The one who never breaks. But here’s the part you never saw: I have been breaking for years. You just didn’t notice — because I made sure you didn’t. I learned early that a man’s pain isn’t something people want to hear about. People love you when you’re useful, when you’re standing tall, when you’re smiling through storms. But the moment a crack appears, the warmth disappears. Or may...
Why Men Don’t Ask for Help: The Silent Human Crisis We Were Never Taught to See
Mental Health

Why Men Don’t Ask for Help: The Silent Human Crisis We Were Never Taught to See

Across continents, cultures, religions, and generations, one brutal truth persists about men—a truth so deeply woven into human behavior that we barely recognize it anymore. Men struggle quietly. They suffer with a silence so profound, so normalized, that it has become invisible. A man can be falling apart emotionally, drowning financially, shattering spiritually, and still sit at a dinner table with a steady face, a practiced smile, and the same predictable sentence: “I’m fine.” The world rarely questions that answer because it prefers men to be fine. Civilization has been built on the expectation that men should be the ones holding the line, absorbing the shock, bearing the weight, and suppressing their fears. From childhood onward, men are conditioned to believe that asking for help is ...
International Men’s Day: The Silent Pain of Men the World Chooses Not to See
World

International Men’s Day: The Silent Pain of Men the World Chooses Not to See

International Men’s Day arrives every year with barely a whisper. It passes like a shadow—quiet, unnoticed, often mocked, sometimes ignored—despite being dedicated to half the world’s population. There are no campaigns splashed across cities, no global movements of empathy, no special broadcasts or celebrity tributes. Instead, it slips by with a heavy kind of silence, a silence that mirrors the unspoken ache within millions of men who have been taught—since boyhood—to swallow their emotions until even they can no longer taste them. We call men protectors, providers, guardians, anchors, shields, foundations. We praise their strength, resilience, reliability. Yet we almost never call them human. We forget, or refuse to acknowledge, that the faces behind these roles are often trembling, exhau...
The Triumph of Cynicism: Why the Ancient Philosophy of Diogenes Perfectly Describes Modern Digital Anxiety
Philosophy

The Triumph of Cynicism: Why the Ancient Philosophy of Diogenes Perfectly Describes Modern Digital Anxiety

If Diogenes of Sinope were alive today, he wouldn’t be living in a barrel.He’d be living online—weaponizing sarcasm, dismantling illusions, exposing hypocrisy, and delivering uncomfortable truths in the comments section of every social platform. He would be the philosopher-troll we didn’t know we needed, but absolutely deserved. The strange and ironic reality is this: a wandering philosopher from the 4th century BCE may understand modern digital life better than any influencer, psychologist, or tech mogul. The world of algorithms, curated perfection, and hyper-surveillance has resurrected the core anxieties Diogenes spent his entire life mocking. We’ve all become participants in a digital ecosystem defined by performative selfhood, constant comparison, and chronic dissatisfaction—the ex...
The Great Displacement: How Climate Migration Will Reshape the Global Map and Urban Life in the Next Century
Earth

The Great Displacement: How Climate Migration Will Reshape the Global Map and Urban Life in the Next Century

For most of human history, migration unfolded slowly—driven by trade, conquest, or the search for fertile land. But the 21st century is introducing a new, unprecedented force that will uproot millions: climate change. As oceans rise, farmlands fail, heat becomes dangerous, and storms intensify, humanity is entering an era of mobility unlike anything civilization has ever experienced. This is not a distant dystopian theory. It is happening now. From sinking islands in the Pacific to desertifying regions in Africa and South Asia, from wildfire-ravaged communities in North America to coastal cities confronting the inevitability of rising seas, entire populations are already on the move. The next 100 years will not simply be defined by climate change—they will be defined by climate migration...
The AI Ghostwriter: Can a Machine Master Narrative, or Does Storytelling Require Consciousness?
literature

The AI Ghostwriter: Can a Machine Master Narrative, or Does Storytelling Require Consciousness?

For centuries, storytelling has been considered the most human of arts—a craft shaped by memory, emotion, trauma, imagination, and the messy interior landscape of lived experience. Stories were how ancient civilizations preserved identity, how religions transmitted meaning, how cultures created morality, and how individuals made sense of themselves. A writer was not just a producer of text but a vessel of consciousness. And then came the age of the machine. Large Language Models (LLMs) have exploded into public life, capable of writing novels, film scripts, speeches, poems, and journalism at speeds no human mind could ever approach. They mimic style, structure, pacing, and even emotional tone. To some, this is a technological miracle. To others, it is a threat to creative integrity. And ...
Fashion as a Time Machine: Why Generation Z Is Obsessed With Y2K and Retro Aesthetics
Fashion

Fashion as a Time Machine: Why Generation Z Is Obsessed With Y2K and Retro Aesthetics

Fashion has always been cyclical, but Generation Z has turned nostalgia into something bigger than a passing trend. For them, retro aesthetics are not just clothes—they are a cultural portal, a digital rebellion, a coping mechanism, and a way to rewrite the past they never actually lived. In an age shaped by technological uncertainty, climate anxiety, and economic instability, Gen Z has discovered that fashion can function as a time machine. And the moment they keep traveling back to—almost compulsively—is the Y2K era. Low-rise jeans, bedazzled flip phones, baby tees, jelly shoes, butterfly clips, wired headphones, glossy lip gloss, chaotic layering, cyber-influenced metallics, and grainy camcorder aesthetics flood TikTok feeds and Instagram moodboards. These are not ironic revivals; they...
From Forest Demon to Social Media Icon: How Modern Mythology Is Re-Imagining Cryptids for the Digital Age
Myths

From Forest Demon to Social Media Icon: How Modern Mythology Is Re-Imagining Cryptids for the Digital Age

For centuries, cryptids lived in the dark margins of folklore. They lurked in forests, swamps, mountains, and the corners of our collective imagination—half-believed, half-feared, and always whispered about. Yet in the twenty-first century, these shadowy beings have undergone a strange and fascinating transformation. Once creatures of dirt paths, campfire tales, and ancient superstition, cryptids have now become digital celebrities—icons, memes, fandom favorites, and mythological mascots for entire online communities. The forest demon became fan art.The lake monster became a TikTok trend.The urban legend became a viral hashtag.The unknown became profitable, relatable, and strangely lovable. The digital age hasn’t destroyed mythology. It has rewritten it. Modern cryptids aren’t just mons...
The Secret History of Sensory Deprivation: How Ancient Philosophers and Priests Used Isolation to Achieve Enlightenment
archeology

The Secret History of Sensory Deprivation: How Ancient Philosophers and Priests Used Isolation to Achieve Enlightenment

In modern culture, sensory deprivation is associated with float tanks, neuroscience labs, and biohackers seeking inner clarity. But the idea is anything but new. Thousands of years before psychologists coined terms like “altered states of consciousness,” ancient priests, mystics, monks, and philosophers discovered something profound: when the senses fall silent, the mind begins to speak. What science studies today as an experimental phenomenon was once a guarded spiritual technology, used to access visions, revelations, creativity, and even political authority. Across civilizations—from Egypt to Greece, from the Himalayas to the Mayan world—sensory deprivation was not an accidental discovery. It was a deliberate path to enlightenment. This is the hidden history of a practice far older an...
Beyond Our Universe: Why the Multiverse Theory Is No Longer Science Fiction, But a Mathematical Imperative
Science

Beyond Our Universe: Why the Multiverse Theory Is No Longer Science Fiction, But a Mathematical Imperative

For most of human history, the idea of parallel universes belonged to the realm of myth, mysticism, and—much later—science fiction. It appeared in folk tales about mirrored worlds, in ancient philosophical speculation, and eventually in comic books and blockbuster movies. But today, the multiverse has evolved from a narrative device into something far more serious: a concept many physicists now consider not only plausible, but mathematically unavoidable. The shift didn’t happen overnight. It emerged through decades of cosmology, quantum mechanics, and high-level mathematics converging on one strange truth: our universe is too unlikely, too fine-tuned, and too cosmically specific to be the only one. The multiverse, once dismissed as speculation, now stands at the crossroads of modern physi...
The Post-Hustle Ethos: Tracing the History of Resistance to Workism from the Luddites to ‘Quiet Quitting’
Lifestyle

The Post-Hustle Ethos: Tracing the History of Resistance to Workism from the Luddites to ‘Quiet Quitting’

The twenty-first century has become obsessed with productivity. For years, social media glorified 4 a.m. wake-up calls, side-hustles stacked atop full-time jobs, “grindset” motivational quotes, and the idea that constant work is the path to meaning. This ideology, known as workism, transformed labor into identity, productivity into virtue, and exhaustion into a badge of honor. But as burnout spread like a societal fever and the pandemic shattered long-standing myths about labor, a countermovement emerged — quieter, slower, and surprisingly familiar. This so-called post-hustle ethos is not merely a trend. It is a resurrection of a much older cycle of resistance to labor exploitation. From the Luddites in the early nineteenth century to modern-day “quiet quitters,” the battle against workis...
Why We Can’t Look Away: The Neuroscience of Doomscrolling and Our Cognitive Addiction to Negative Information
Mental Health

Why We Can’t Look Away: The Neuroscience of Doomscrolling and Our Cognitive Addiction to Negative Information

We live in a world where a single swipe can reveal a tragedy, a crisis, a scandal, or the next global disaster. The term doomscrolling — the compulsive consumption of negative news — entered popular vocabulary only recently, yet it instantly felt familiar. Everyone recognizes the pattern: it’s late at night, your phone glows in the dark, and you keep scrolling through catastrophe after catastrophe. You don’t want to, you know you shouldn’t, yet you do. The thumb moves on its own. The mind sinks deeper. The cycle repeats. But doomscrolling is not a moral failing or a lack of willpower. It is a neurological trap, perfected by the architecture of human cognition and amplified by the design of modern information systems. Bad news doesn’t simply attract us — it hooks us. Understanding why requ...
The Uncanny Valley of Digital Identity: The Philosophical and Legal Battle Over AI-Generated Deepfakes
Technology

The Uncanny Valley of Digital Identity: The Philosophical and Legal Battle Over AI-Generated Deepfakes

We have entered an era where the boundary between what is real and what merely appears real is dissolving. A face, once the most immutable symbol of personal identity, is now as editable as a JPEG on a laptop. A voice, once the anchor of one’s presence, can be rewritten with a few seconds of audio. Digital fingerprints are no longer guarantees — they are materials. We are living in the age of synthetic media, where deepfakes challenge not only our political systems and legal frameworks but also something far more delicate: the very concept of the self. At the heart of this crisis lies the Uncanny Valley, the disturbing psychological space where human-like replicas feel almost real yet undeniably wrong. Deepfakes, hyperreal voices, and AI-generated personas inhabit this valley, blurring id...
The Wicked Game – Episode 8: The Turning Point That Changes Everything
TV Shows

The Wicked Game – Episode 8: The Turning Point That Changes Everything

Episode 8 of The Wicked Game arrives not just as another chapter in the story, but as the episode that pulls every thread tight and exposes the true architecture of betrayal, desire, and power at the center of the narrative. If earlier episodes set the board, Episode 8 is where someone finally flips it — hard. This is where masks come off, loyalties fracture, and the show’s central theme becomes sharper than ever: in this game, no one plays clean — not even the ones pretending to. Below is a complete breakdown of Episode 8, followed by an analytical deep dive into symbolism, character arcs, and what this episode means for the rest of the series. A Quick Recap: When All Quiet Moments Hide a Storm Episode 8 opens right after the emotional debris left behind in Episode 7. The cha...