
Negotiators from more than 100 countries completed a U.N. treaty to protect the high seas on Saturday, a long-awaited step that environmental groups say will help reverse marine biodiversity losses and ensure sustainable development
Written by David Stanway

Negotiators from more than 100 countries completed a U.N. treaty to protect the high seas on Saturday, a long-awaited step that environmental groups say will help reverse marine biodiversity losses and ensure sustainable development
Written by Joel Smalley

Carl Heneghan, professor of evidence-based medecine and clinical epidemiologist, talks to Calvin Robinson on GB News
Written by Thomas Claburn

Lithium, sometimes hyped as white gold, has been highly sought after for its role in battery production, and other things
Written by Suzanne Burdick Ph.D.

Merck researchers on Monday published a study suggesting evidence shows that moving routine HPV vaccination to ages 9 to 10 may improve vaccination coverage rates in early and mid-adolescence, but critics called out the vaccine maker for focusing on profits, not health
Written by Peter A. McCullough, MD, MPH

Before COVID-19 myocarditis was rare and always alerted cardiologists to future risks of two outcomes: 1) heart failure, 2) arrythmias (ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation) leading to cardiopulmonary arrest.
Written by Marina Zhang

Vitamin D supplements are currently recommended at a dose of 600 international units (IU) per day by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), alongside a warning about potential toxicities if people take more
Written by Jan Jekielek

“Once I had spent time critically analyzing the data on the COVID-19 vaccines, it became very clear to me that the efficacy of this particular novel technology … was very, very poor, certainly in comparison to traditional vaccines. And the harms were unprecedented,” says Dr. Aseem Malhotra (pictured), a highly-published cardiologist and one of the most well-known doctors in Britain
Written by Joseph Mercola

Edited by Fauci, the “Proximal Origin of SARS-CoV-2” paper was accessed more than 6.7 million times and cited by over 2,000 media outlets. But was it accurate?
Written by Joseph Mercola

I suspect this popular medicine has been the target of a discrediting campaign for the simple reason it competes with newer, far more expensive blood thinners and pain relievers that cost 366 times more. Studies show it’s just as effective, and the only difference is cost.
Written by The Daily Mail

Scientists working on the most authoritative study on ‘climate change’ were urged to cover up the fact that the world’s temperature hasn’t risen for the last 15 years, it is claimed
Written by Dr Vernon Coleman

The bad news, I’m afraid, is that anyone who allowed themselves to be jabbed with the fake, pseudo vaccine which was fraudulently promoted to prevent people catching or spreading covid-19 – the rebranded flu – then I’m afraid the evidence strongly suggests that they’re more vulnerable than those who aren’t jabbed.
Written by John Nugent

One of the greatest ripoffs of all time was the theft of German patents after World War II
Written by Leo Cashman

With EPA delay tactics stopped, a federal judge moves ahead with trial that may end water fluoridation in America
Written by Wonderopolis

Wonder Friends already know that birds of a feather flock together. But what do you call that flock when the birds of a feather are starlings? Give up? It’s called a murmuration
Written by Chris Morrison

Billions of people around the world face starvation if Net Zero policies ban the production of nitrogen fertilizer derived from ‘fossil fuels’
Written by John Droz

We’ve been told by multiple parties, that trying to fix the US Education system is a fool’s errand, and only indicates that the aspirants have masochistic tendencies