
Slipping and sliding on snowy or icy roads is dangerous. Salt and sand help melt ice or provide traction, but excessive use is bad for the environment.
Written by American Chemical Society

Slipping and sliding on snowy or icy roads is dangerous. Salt and sand help melt ice or provide traction, but excessive use is bad for the environment.
Written by MARK TAPSCOTT

Here’s the most important fact about plug-in electric vehicles (EV), courtesy of the politically-motivated content-creators at Wikipedia in the opening sentence of their post on “Government Incentives for Plug-in Electric Vehicles:”
Written by Peter A. McCullough, MD, MPH

One of the consequences of young healthy woman receiving an unnecessary COVID-19 vaccine is the dangerous transition from being previously well to a new state of discomfort and or altered reproductive physiology.
Written by Green Med Info

The greatest ally against chronic disease may be found in your everyday diet, from fresh, raw fruits and vegetables to popular beverages such as coffee and green tea
Written by James Templeton

Right on the heels of the disastrous train derailment and subsequent chemical exposure in East Palestine, Ohio, was a semi-truck accident on Interstate 10 near Kolb Road in Tucson, Arizona, that also released a very dangerous chemical. Both incidents resulted in the hurried evacuation of citizens in concerned areas.
Written by newconservativepost.com

Last month, TIME noted that a “string of mysterious attacks on power stations across the U.S.” had “rekindled fears about the vulnerabilities of America’s electricity infrastructure, which security officials have warned presents a growing target to extremists and saboteurs.
Written by John Dee

We’re on the fifth day of the new ONS file of files with a revision for outright bloopers already released, but with a bunch of issues remaining that is bigger than my full English breakfast (and I like a big breakfast).
Written by Patrice Lewis

It’s been interesting to watch the increasing obsession with pushing green energy and the corresponding push-back against ‘fossil fuels’. Anyone with a brain knows this is a recipe for disaster, but the world is hurtling down that path anyway.
Written by Dr Patrick Moore

Since 2016, when acoustic sonar surveys required for construction of 1,500 wind turbines began on the U.S. Atlantic coast, 174 Humpback whales have washed ashore dead.
Written by Steve Goreham

We are in the midst of history’s greatest wealth transfer. Government subsidized wind systems, solar arrays, and electric vehicles overwhelmingly benefit the wealthy members of society and rich nations.
Written by Amelia Tait

The rise in global antibiotic resistance means huge sums are being invested in ground-breaking treatments. But some scientists are turning back the clock in the hunt for effective alternatives
Written by Robert W Malone MD, MS

As the COVID crisis begins to sunset in the West, and the next set of manufactured then weaponized crises dawn in the East, we are left with the problem of trying to make sense of what we have experienced since 2019.
Written by Ana Maria Mihalcea, MD, PhD

I had the great honor to be invited to speak with Major Dr. Samuel Sigoloff (pictured) on his Podcast “After Hours with Dr. Sigoloff”. He has been one of my great inspirational heroes in this war.
Written by Daniel Șterbuleac

While I was doing my biweekly commute I couldn’t help myself notice, from time to time, a stranded car leaning on the side of the road. It usually was an older (about twenty-year-old) German car, but sometimes newer cars also.
Written by Tanja Katarina Rebel

Dear all, If you haven’t responded to the Digital ID Consultation yet, please can you do so by this Tuesday 1st of March?
Written by John Leake

In 1943, the Lutheran pastor and member of the German resistance, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, was arrested and incarcerated in Tegel Prison. There he meditated on the question of why the German people—in spite of their vast education, culture, and intellectual achievements—had fallen so far from reason and morality.